1. Stability of fluoxetine hydrochloride in fluoxetine solution diluted with common pharmaceutical diluents.
- Author
-
Peterson JA, Risley DS, Anderson PN, and Hostettler KF
- Subjects
- Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid, Drug Stability, Humans, Pharmaceutical Vehicles chemistry, Solutions chemistry, Fluoxetine chemistry
- Abstract
The stability of fluoxetine hydrochloride in fluoxetine solution diluted with five common pharmaceutical diluents was studied. Fluoxetine syrup, containing fluoxetine 4 mg/mL (as the hydrochloride salt), was diluted to 1 and 2 mg/mL in each of the following: deionized water; Simple Syrup, British Pharmacopeia; Simple Syrup, USP; Aromatic Elixir, USP; and grape-cranberry drink. Each solution was divided into eight 120-mL amber glass bottles: four stored at 5 degrees C and four stored at 30 degrees C. Samples were removed from each bottle at time zero and two, four, and eight weeks and assayed in triplicate with high-performance liquid chromatographic methods for determining fluoxetine concentration and concentration of its primary degradation product, alpha-[2-(methylamino)ethyl]benzene methanol. Stability was established if the fluoxetine concentration changed by < 10% and if the concentration of the degradation product was < 1% of the initial fluoxetine concentration. No test mixture dropped below 95% of the initial fluoxetine concentration or exceeded 0.5% degradation product during the study period. Fluoxetine hydrochloride was stable for eight weeks in fluoxetine solution diluted to 1 or 2 mg/mL with common pharmaceutical diluents and stored at 5 or 30 degrees C.
- Published
- 1994