Cargando…

Cistracurium Besylate 10 mg/mL Solution Compounded in a Hospital Pharmacy to Prevent Drug Shortages: A Stability Study Involving Four Degradation Products

Background: Stability study of a 10 mg/mL injectable cisatracurium solution stored refrigerated in amber glass ampoules for 18 months (M18). Methods: 4000 ampoules were aseptically compounded using European Pharmacopoeia (EP)-grade cisatracurium besylate, sterile water for injection, and benzenesulf...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Roche, Marine, Danel, Cécile, Simon, Nicolas, Kouach, Mostafa, Bouchfaa, Myriam, Berneron, Christophe, Odou, Pascal, Lannoy, Damien
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10221331/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37242646
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics15051404
_version_ 1785049430576070656
author Roche, Marine
Danel, Cécile
Simon, Nicolas
Kouach, Mostafa
Bouchfaa, Myriam
Berneron, Christophe
Odou, Pascal
Lannoy, Damien
author_facet Roche, Marine
Danel, Cécile
Simon, Nicolas
Kouach, Mostafa
Bouchfaa, Myriam
Berneron, Christophe
Odou, Pascal
Lannoy, Damien
author_sort Roche, Marine
collection PubMed
description Background: Stability study of a 10 mg/mL injectable cisatracurium solution stored refrigerated in amber glass ampoules for 18 months (M18). Methods: 4000 ampoules were aseptically compounded using European Pharmacopoeia (EP)-grade cisatracurium besylate, sterile water for injection, and benzenesulfonic acid. We developed and validated a stability-indicating HPLC-UV method for cisatracurium and laudanosine. At each stability study time point, we recorded the visual aspect, cisatracurium and laudanosine levels, pH, and osmolality. Sterility, bacterial endotoxin content, and non-visible particles in solution were checked after compounding (T0) and after M12 and M18 of storage. We used HPLC-MS/MS to identify the degradation products (DPs). Results: During the study, osmolality remained stable, pH decreased slightly, and the organoleptic properties did not change. The number of non-visible particles remained below the EP’s threshold. Sterility was preserved, and bacterial endotoxin level remained below the calculated threshold. Cisatracurium concentration remained within the ±10% acceptance interval for 15 months and then decreased to 88.7% of C0 after M18. The laudanosine generated accounted for less than a fifth of the cisatracurium degradation, and three DPs were generated—identified as EP impurity A, impurities E/F, and impurities N/O. Conclusion: Compounded 10 mg/mL cisatracurium injectable solution is stable for at least 15 months.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10221331
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-102213312023-05-28 Cistracurium Besylate 10 mg/mL Solution Compounded in a Hospital Pharmacy to Prevent Drug Shortages: A Stability Study Involving Four Degradation Products Roche, Marine Danel, Cécile Simon, Nicolas Kouach, Mostafa Bouchfaa, Myriam Berneron, Christophe Odou, Pascal Lannoy, Damien Pharmaceutics Article Background: Stability study of a 10 mg/mL injectable cisatracurium solution stored refrigerated in amber glass ampoules for 18 months (M18). Methods: 4000 ampoules were aseptically compounded using European Pharmacopoeia (EP)-grade cisatracurium besylate, sterile water for injection, and benzenesulfonic acid. We developed and validated a stability-indicating HPLC-UV method for cisatracurium and laudanosine. At each stability study time point, we recorded the visual aspect, cisatracurium and laudanosine levels, pH, and osmolality. Sterility, bacterial endotoxin content, and non-visible particles in solution were checked after compounding (T0) and after M12 and M18 of storage. We used HPLC-MS/MS to identify the degradation products (DPs). Results: During the study, osmolality remained stable, pH decreased slightly, and the organoleptic properties did not change. The number of non-visible particles remained below the EP’s threshold. Sterility was preserved, and bacterial endotoxin level remained below the calculated threshold. Cisatracurium concentration remained within the ±10% acceptance interval for 15 months and then decreased to 88.7% of C0 after M18. The laudanosine generated accounted for less than a fifth of the cisatracurium degradation, and three DPs were generated—identified as EP impurity A, impurities E/F, and impurities N/O. Conclusion: Compounded 10 mg/mL cisatracurium injectable solution is stable for at least 15 months. MDPI 2023-05-04 /pmc/articles/PMC10221331/ /pubmed/37242646 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics15051404 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Roche, Marine
Danel, Cécile
Simon, Nicolas
Kouach, Mostafa
Bouchfaa, Myriam
Berneron, Christophe
Odou, Pascal
Lannoy, Damien
Cistracurium Besylate 10 mg/mL Solution Compounded in a Hospital Pharmacy to Prevent Drug Shortages: A Stability Study Involving Four Degradation Products
title Cistracurium Besylate 10 mg/mL Solution Compounded in a Hospital Pharmacy to Prevent Drug Shortages: A Stability Study Involving Four Degradation Products
title_full Cistracurium Besylate 10 mg/mL Solution Compounded in a Hospital Pharmacy to Prevent Drug Shortages: A Stability Study Involving Four Degradation Products
title_fullStr Cistracurium Besylate 10 mg/mL Solution Compounded in a Hospital Pharmacy to Prevent Drug Shortages: A Stability Study Involving Four Degradation Products
title_full_unstemmed Cistracurium Besylate 10 mg/mL Solution Compounded in a Hospital Pharmacy to Prevent Drug Shortages: A Stability Study Involving Four Degradation Products
title_short Cistracurium Besylate 10 mg/mL Solution Compounded in a Hospital Pharmacy to Prevent Drug Shortages: A Stability Study Involving Four Degradation Products
title_sort cistracurium besylate 10 mg/ml solution compounded in a hospital pharmacy to prevent drug shortages: a stability study involving four degradation products
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10221331/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37242646
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics15051404
work_keys_str_mv AT rochemarine cistracuriumbesylate10mgmlsolutioncompoundedinahospitalpharmacytopreventdrugshortagesastabilitystudyinvolvingfourdegradationproducts
AT danelcecile cistracuriumbesylate10mgmlsolutioncompoundedinahospitalpharmacytopreventdrugshortagesastabilitystudyinvolvingfourdegradationproducts
AT simonnicolas cistracuriumbesylate10mgmlsolutioncompoundedinahospitalpharmacytopreventdrugshortagesastabilitystudyinvolvingfourdegradationproducts
AT kouachmostafa cistracuriumbesylate10mgmlsolutioncompoundedinahospitalpharmacytopreventdrugshortagesastabilitystudyinvolvingfourdegradationproducts
AT bouchfaamyriam cistracuriumbesylate10mgmlsolutioncompoundedinahospitalpharmacytopreventdrugshortagesastabilitystudyinvolvingfourdegradationproducts
AT berneronchristophe cistracuriumbesylate10mgmlsolutioncompoundedinahospitalpharmacytopreventdrugshortagesastabilitystudyinvolvingfourdegradationproducts
AT odoupascal cistracuriumbesylate10mgmlsolutioncompoundedinahospitalpharmacytopreventdrugshortagesastabilitystudyinvolvingfourdegradationproducts
AT lannoydamien cistracuriumbesylate10mgmlsolutioncompoundedinahospitalpharmacytopreventdrugshortagesastabilitystudyinvolvingfourdegradationproducts