Method Development and Validations: Characterization of
Critical Elements in the Development of Pharmaceuticals
Ramesh R
Putheti1*, R N Okigbo2,
Sangeeta C Patil3
Madhusoodan sai Advanapu4, Radha Leburu5
1Member,
American Association of Pharmaceutical scientists,
236-203, Saint David Court, Maryland, USA, 21030,
Tel: 1-614-535-7928.
2Department
of Botany, Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Awka, PMB 5025,
Anambra State, Nigeria. Email:
okigborn17@yahoo.com
3Wall-Mart
Pharmacy, Elicotcity, Maryland, USA.
4Vel’s
College of Science, University of Madras, India.
5Dept
of Biotechnology, S.V University, India
*For correspondence: E-mail:
rutwikusa@yahoo.com
International
Journal of Health Research,
March
2008; 1(1):
11-20
Received: 12-Feb-08 Revision received:
23-Feb-08 Accepted for publication: 28-Feb-08
Review Article
Although a thorough validation cannot rule out all
potential problems, the process of method development
and validation should address the most common ones.
Examples of typical problems that can be minimized or
avoided are synthesis impurities that co-elute with the
analyte peak in an HPLC assay; a particular type of
column that no longer produces the separation needed
because the supplier of the column has changed the
manufacturing process; an assay method that is
transferred to a second laboratory where they are unable
to achieve the same detection limit; and a quality
assurance audit of a validation report that finds no
documentation on how the method was performed during the
validation. Problems increase as additional people,
laboratories, and equipment are used to perform the
method. When the method is used in the developer's
laboratory, a small adjustment can usually be made to
make the method work, but the flexibility to change it
is lost once the method is transferred to other
laboratories or used for official product testing. This
is especially true in the pharmaceutical industry, where
methods are submitted to regulatory agencies and changes
may require formal approval before they can be
implemented for official testing. The best way to
minimize method problems is to perform adequate
validation experiments during development.
Keywords:
Method validation, method development, pharmaceutical
analysis