TY - JOUR
T1 - A novel high throughput 96-well-based fluorimetric method to measure amikacin in pharmaceutical formulations
T2 - development using response surface methodology
AU - Maxwell, Amala
AU - Mary, Elizabeth
AU - Ghate, Vivek
AU - Aranjani, Jesil
AU - Lewis, Shaila
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors are grateful to the All-India Council for Technical Education (AICTE), New Delhi, India, for providing financial assistance in the form of the National Doctoral Fellowship (NDF) to Amala Maxwell [File No. 1-6190129051]. The authors also thank the Manipal College of Pharmaceutical Sciences and Manipal Academy of Higher Education (MAHE), Manipal, India, for providing intramural funds and facilities for the research. The authors are grateful to the Department of Biotechnology, Manipal College of Pharmaceutical Sciences, MAHE and the research scholar Anuraag Muralidharan for their technical assistance with the fluorescence plate reader.
Funding Information:
The authors are grateful to the All‐India Council for Technical Education (AICTE), New Delhi, India, for providing financial assistance in the form of the National Doctoral Fellowship (NDF) to Amala Maxwell [File No. 1‐6190129051]. The authors also thank the Manipal College of Pharmaceutical Sciences and Manipal Academy of Higher Education (MAHE), Manipal, India, for providing intramural funds and facilities for the research. The authors are grateful to the Department of Biotechnology, Manipal College of Pharmaceutical Sciences, MAHE and the research scholar Anuraag Muralidharan for their technical assistance with the fluorescence plate reader.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
PY - 2022/6
Y1 - 2022/6
N2 - An aminoglycoside antibiotic, amikacin, is used to treat severe and recurring bacterial infections. Due to the absence of a chromophore, however, amikacin must be extensively derivatized before being quantified, both in analytical and bioanalytical samples. In this study, for the first time, we developed a simple and sensitive method for measuring amikacin sulfate using spectrofluorimetry with a 96-well plate reader, based on the design of the experiment's approach. To develop a robust and reproducible spectrofluorimetric method, the influence of essential attributes, namely pH of the buffer, heating temperature, and concentration of reagents, were evaluated using univariate analysis followed by multivariate analysis (central composite design). International Conference of Harmonization guidelines were used to validate the optimized method. The developed technique is linear from 1.9 to 10 μg/ml with a regression coefficient of 0.9991. The detection and quantification limits were 0.649 μg/ml and 1.9 μg/ml, respectively. For the developed method, both intraday and interday precision (%RSD) were less than 5%. Using the method, amikacin concentrations were quantified in prepared amikacin liposomes and commercial formulations of Amicin®. The developed method greatly reduces sample volume and is a rapid, high throughput microplate-based fluorescence approach for the convenient and cost-effective measurement of amikacin in pharmaceutical formulations. In comparison with previously published approaches, the suggested method allowed for quick analysis of a high number of samples in a short amount of time (96 samples in 125 sec), resulting in an average duration of analysis of 1.3 sec per sample.
AB - An aminoglycoside antibiotic, amikacin, is used to treat severe and recurring bacterial infections. Due to the absence of a chromophore, however, amikacin must be extensively derivatized before being quantified, both in analytical and bioanalytical samples. In this study, for the first time, we developed a simple and sensitive method for measuring amikacin sulfate using spectrofluorimetry with a 96-well plate reader, based on the design of the experiment's approach. To develop a robust and reproducible spectrofluorimetric method, the influence of essential attributes, namely pH of the buffer, heating temperature, and concentration of reagents, were evaluated using univariate analysis followed by multivariate analysis (central composite design). International Conference of Harmonization guidelines were used to validate the optimized method. The developed technique is linear from 1.9 to 10 μg/ml with a regression coefficient of 0.9991. The detection and quantification limits were 0.649 μg/ml and 1.9 μg/ml, respectively. For the developed method, both intraday and interday precision (%RSD) were less than 5%. Using the method, amikacin concentrations were quantified in prepared amikacin liposomes and commercial formulations of Amicin®. The developed method greatly reduces sample volume and is a rapid, high throughput microplate-based fluorescence approach for the convenient and cost-effective measurement of amikacin in pharmaceutical formulations. In comparison with previously published approaches, the suggested method allowed for quick analysis of a high number of samples in a short amount of time (96 samples in 125 sec), resulting in an average duration of analysis of 1.3 sec per sample.
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U2 - 10.1002/bio.4238
DO - 10.1002/bio.4238
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85127792800
SN - 1522-7235
VL - 37
SP - 930
EP - 943
JO - Luminescence
JF - Luminescence
IS - 6
ER -