by
Dan » Thu Aug 25, 2005 8:23 pm
cdcl3,
As others have mentioned, you can quantitate the impurities relative to the drug substance using a relative response factor (RRF) that you determine experimentally if you have the impurities or you assume an RRF of 1.
If you do that, then you will not need reference standards of the impurities for quantitation. However, you would need them to find their retention times.
Please note that the above statements are generic for the impurity analysis of a drug substance.
What you need to do is look at your specific method. I looked up the EP monograph for cetirizine. This method has the impurities quantitated simply by a comparison of peak areas relative to the peak area of the drug substance in the "Reference solution (b)". All impurities (A, B, C, D, E and F as well as any unknown impurities) have a limit of not more than 0.1 percent). Again, the monograph method states that the quantitation is done by peak areas.
So you do not need reference materials for Impurities B, C, D, E and F. You do need Impurity A as there is a system suitability requirement for the resolution between Impurity A and the cetirizine. The EP monograph states that Impurity A is available as a certified reference standard.
One final comment, please be aware that those impurities listed in the EP monograph are only potential impurities, you may not find all of them in your particular batch of drug substance.
I hope this helps.
Regards,
Dan