ABSTRACT
Objectives:
The aim of this study is to study the electroactivity of zoledronic acid (ZOL), optimize the parameters affecting voltametric analysis of ZOL, and make a comparison between voltametric methods used to assay ZOL.
Materials and Methods:
Three voltametric methods, cyclic voltammetry (CV), square wave voltammetry (SWV), and differential pulse voltammetry (DPV), were used to determine the concentrations of ZOL solutions (0.25-1.2 mg.mL-1). Britton-Robinson universal buffer solutions (BRB) were used as supporting electrolytes with a glassy carbon working electrode.
Results:
The calibration plots were linear in the range from 0.20 to 1.2 mg.mL-1 for differential DPV and CV and from 0.09 to 1.2 mg.mL-1 for SWV. DPV showed the highest correlation coefficient R2 value of 0.993 and the lowest limit of detection (LOD) of 37.2 μg.mL-1. Furthermore, DPV exhibited the highest precision with the lowest relative standard deviations (RSD) values. For a commercial product of ZOL, DPV showed the best accuracy and precision with 102.32% recovery and 2.88% RSD.
Conclusion:
ZOL is an electroactive compound. The pH of the BRB supporting the electrolyte is important for ZOL electroactivity. DPV is the recommended method for voltametric analysis of ZOL because of its high-performance regarding accuracy, precision, and LOD compared with other studied methods.
INTRODUCTION
Zoledronic acid (ZOL), which is known by the IUBAC name (1-hydroxy-2-imidazole-1-yl-phosphonoethyl) phosphonic acid (Figure 1), is a bone resorption inhibitor compound used principally for the treatment osteoporosis, Paget’s bone disease, and malignant hypercalcemia.1,2,3 The pharmacologic action of ZOL bisphosphonate is to inhibit bone resorption by acting on osteoclasts or on osteoclast precursors to inhibit osteoclastic activity and skeletal calcium release induced by tumors.2
Several methods have been used for analysis of pharmaceutical compounds, such as chromatographic, spectroscopic, and electrochemical methods. Most standard methods essentially rely on chromatography, especially high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). On the other hand, chromatographic methods have high operation and instrumentation costs; furthermore, chromatographic methods are not green analytical methods because of the large amount of organic solvents used in them.
Electroanalytical methods are better alternatives to spectroscopic and chromatographic methods, because they offer advantages such as low instrumentation and operation costs, short analysis times, and simplicity.
Electroanalytical methods such as voltametric, potentiometric, and polarographic methods have been widely applied to pharmaceutical compound analysis.4,5,6,7,8 These techniques show reliable results with respect to accuracy, precision, sensitivity, and selectivity.4,5
Several research studies have worked on ZOL determination. Most of these studies used HPLC to study ZOL in different media, such as pharmaceutical products,9,10 human urine and blood plasma,11 human bone,12,13 and murine bone.14 Legay et al.15 developed a radioimmunoassay method for ZOL determination in human serum, plasma, and urine. Amin et al.16 developed a switchable fluorescence probe for ZOL determination in human serum. In the present work, we study the electroactivity of ZOL and the parameters affecting voltametric analysis of ZOL, such as the working electrode and supporting electrolyte. In addition, we establish a comparison between voltametric methods used for ZOL assay in a pure pharmaceutical formulation and the final product solution.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
CONCLUSION
Voltametric analysis indicated that ZOL is an electroactive compound. CV of ZOL exhibited an irreversible anodic peak current at 1.48V. Optimization of voltametric analysis parameters indicated the significance of the supporting electrolyte pH and the type of working electrode. CV, SWV, and DPV have been applied for voltametric analysis of ZOL, But DPV is the recommended method for voltametric analysis of ZOL because of its high-performance regarding accuracy, precision, and LOD compared with other studied methods.
Materials
Commercial product of ZOL (ZOL HIKMA® 4 mg/5 mL concentrate for solution for infusion) and ZOL standard material were provided by Hikma pharmaceutical company (Jordan). Potassium nitrate (KNO3 ACS reagent) was from Fluka, sodium sulfate anhydrous (Na2SO4) was from Janssen Chemica, and citric acid anhydrous was from Al-Saggaf pharma.
Britton-Robinson universal buffer solutions (BRB) pH (2.1-11.6) were prepared by mixing certain amounts of boric acid, acetic acid, and phosphoric acid, then sodium hydroxide (0.20 M) was used to adjust the pH of the mixture.
Phosphate buffer pH 6.8 (NaH2PO4/H3PO4) supporting electrolyte was prepared by dissolving 24 g of NaH2PO4´H2O in 800 mL of deionized water, and then pH 6.8 was reached by adding 85% H3PO4. After that, deionized water was used to complete the volume to 1.0 L.
Sodium citrate buffer (pH 3) supporting electrolyte solution was prepared by mixing 42.5 g of citric acid with 800 mL of deionized water, and then pH 3 was reached by adding NaOH 20% w/v to the solution.
Standard ZOL solutions
Standard stock solutions of ZOL were prepared by dissolving a certain quantity of standard ZOL powder in supporting electrolyte solutions. Working solutions of ZOL standard were prepared by diluting the standard stock solution with the supporting electrolyte. ZOL HIKMA® 4 mg/5 mL concentrate for the solution for the infusion vial was diluted in BRB buffer solution pH 10.52 to reach the required concentration. All voltametric analysis methods were performed in triplicate at each concentration.
Apparatus
A potentiostat (Metrohm Autolab) PGSTAT 204 was used for voltametric determination of ZOL samples. Glassy carbon (GC), gold and platinum were used as the working electrodes in this study, with platinum as the counter electrode and Ag/AgCl (3M KCl) as the reference electrode.
Statistical analysis
Several statistical analyses were conducted in the present work according to ICH guidelines. The statistical analysis included linearity, range, limits of detection and quantitation, and interday and intraday relative standard deviation (RSD), in addition to the recovery study.
Optimization of voltametric analysis parameters
Several supporting electrolytes have been studied for voltametric assay of ZOL in a pharmaceutical formulation. The results of supporting electrolyte studies demonstrate the significance of this parameter, since ZOL did not show electroactivity with several supporting electrolytes, KNO3 1.0 M, phosphate buffer pH 6.8, and sodium citrate buffer pH 3.0, even with different kinds of working electrodes, such as GC, Pt, and Au electrodes. ZOL exhibited electroactivity when BRB was used as the supporting electrolyte with pH 5.94-10.52 and GC as the working electrode (Figure 2), where BRB buffer of pH 10.52 showed the highest performance. Cyclic voltammograms (CV) of ZOL in (Figure 3) indicated that ZOL is electroactive with an irreversible anodic peak current at 1.48V.
Voltametric method study
Three voltametric methods were applied to the ZOL assay in a pharmaceutical formulation: CV, square wave voltammetry (SWV), and differential pulse voltammetry (DPV). ZOL solutions (0.25-1.2 mg.mL-1) were studied with BRB buffer, pH 10.52 as the supporting electrolyte and a GC working electrode. An anodic current potential of 1.48V was selected for the ZOL assay since it showed the highest correlation between SOL concentration and current in all studied voltametric methods (Table 1, Figure 3, 4, 5).
Linearity and range
The linearity of the studied voltametric methods was evaluated from the ZOL standard regression line according to ICH guidelines. Each concentration of ZOL was analyzed in triplicate. According to Table 1, DPV has the highest R2 value of 0.993 compared with other studied methods. The current values plateaued at concentrations higher than (1.2 mg.mL-1) for all studied methods. These results make the dynamic range of DPV and CV (0.20-1.2 mg.mL-1) and (0.09-1.2 mg.mL-1) for SWV.
Detection and quantitation limits
The limits of detection and quantitation for voltametric analysis of ZOL were evaluated based on the SD of the blank (BRB buffer of pH 10.52), where:
Limit of detection (LOD) = yB + 3SB
Limit of quantitation (LOQ) = yB + 10SB
SB: Standard deviation of the blank
yB: Anodic current response of the blank
According to the results in Table 1, DPV shows the lowest LOD of 37.2 µg.mL-1 and SWV the lowest LOQ of 87.5 µg.mL-1.
The slopes of the linear regression calibration curves indicate that CV has the highest sensitivity compared with other methods (Table 1).
Precision
Each concentration of ZOL was assayed in triplicate. The SD of each point on the calibration curves indicated higher precision at high ZOL concentrations for all studied methods. The repeatability and reproducibility of voltametric analysis of ZOL are shown in (Table 2). All studied voltametric methods showed low intraday and interday RSD, which reflected high precision, where DPV exhibited the highest precision with the lowest RSD values (Table 2).
Accuracy
A commercial preparation of ZOL (ZOL HIKMA® 4 mg/5 mL) concentrate for solution for infusion was used to study the accuracy of voltametric methods. Table 3 shows the recovery and RSD of 0.40 mg.mL-1 ZOL using voltametric methods. DPV shows the best accuracy and precision of 102.32% recovery and 2.88% RSD, respectively.
A comparison has been established between different methods used for ZOL determination and the present method according to precision, accuracy and LOD (Table 4). It is clear from Table 4 that most chromatographic methods have better detection limits than those used in the present study. On the other hand, the present study shows comparable recovery and RSD values.