Advertisement

USP <467> Residual solvents

Discussions about GC and other "gas phase" separation techniques.

4 posts Page 1 of 1
Hello,
I have a doubt regarding USP <467> residual solvents: I am testing an Drug substance which has residuals (Methanol, Chloroform) of Class 2 and (Acetone and Ethyl acetate) of Class 3. Can I give a justification by running a quantification method for Class 2 and LOD calculation for Class 3 residuals as mentioned in USP <467> (0.5% or 5000ppm) seperately??

Thanks,
Srinivas
As long as your LOD passes the class 3 limit, I think you are technically allowed, irrespective of whether your process contains class 2 solvents - provided your QA people don't give you any heat. The only trouble is, as you quite sure that you are going to pass the class 3 limit? What if you are close to the line and class 2's present were to push you over?

I have had this problem of a mixture of class 2 and class 3 solvents many times, and I have never chosen the approach of doing class 3 by LOD. Normally, I would develop and validate a method specifically optimized for all of the actual solvents in the process, class 2 and 3. I detest the USP<467> methods, and they're almost as much work to validate for your product as just validating a method from scratch. Plus they do not address class 3 solvents as well, which can be acutally very important to individually identify and quantify.

Normally I find our customers are very interested in the class 3 solvents, plus you never know what can happen down the road. See what happened with THF, and look at how hexane is a class 2 solvent, but somehow heptane is class 3 - can you really be sure that at some point in the future heptane won't be reclassified, or else someone will notice there is a different between n-heptane and heptanes and make you address it, for example? ;)

My advice is don't try to get out of it - just cover your class 3's at the same time as you do your class 2's. I find the LOD thing is only really useful if you only have class 3's present and the LOD is simple and unproblematic.

Stephen
Thanks for the constructive information Stephen!
or else someone will notice there is a different between n-heptane and heptanes and make you address it, for example?

yepp happened to us some time ago (ohh so your heptane used in process (suppliers) "only" have ~50% n-heptane.....)
Izaak Kolthoff: “Theory guides, experiment decides.”
4 posts Page 1 of 1

Who is online

In total there are 16 users online :: 1 registered, 0 hidden and 15 guests (based on users active over the past 5 minutes)
Most users ever online was 4374 on Fri Oct 03, 2025 12:41 am

Users browsing this forum: Google [Bot] and 15 guests

Latest Blog Posts from Separation Science

Separation Science offers free learning from the experts covering methods, applications, webinars, eSeminars, videos, tutorials for users of liquid chromatography, gas chromatography, mass spectrometry, sample preparation and related analytical techniques.

Subscribe to our eNewsletter with daily, weekly or monthly updates: Food & Beverage, Environmental, (Bio)Pharmaceutical, Bioclinical, Liquid Chromatography, Gas Chromatography and Mass Spectrometry.

Liquid Chromatography

Gas Chromatography

Mass Spectrometry