Prevalence of nitrosamine contaminants in drug samples: Has the crisis been overcome?

Arch Pharm (Weinheim). 2023 Feb;356(2):e2200484. doi: 10.1002/ardp.202200484. Epub 2022 Dec 2.

Abstract

Various drug samples (N = 249; drug substances, tablets, capsules, solutions, crèmes, and more) from the European pharmaceutical market were collected since 2019 and analyzed for 16 nitrosamines (NAs). In 2.0% of the cases, NAs were detected. These findings included four active pharmaceutical ingredients already known for potential NA contamination: losartan (N-nitrosodimethylamine [NDMA] and N-nitrosodiethylamine, simultaneously), valsartan (NDMA), metformin (NDMA) and ranitidine (NDMA). The fifth new finding, which has not been reported yet, discovered contamination of a molsidomine tablet sample with N-nitrosomorpholine (NMor). The tablet contained 144% of the toxicological allowable intake for NMor. NMor was included in our screening from the beginning and is currently the focus of regulatory authorities, but was added to the guidelines only last year. Thus, it may not have been the focus of regulatory investigations for too long. Our results indicate that the majority of drug products in the market are nonhazardous in terms of patient safety and drug purity. Unfortunately, the list of individual affected products keeps growing constantly and new NA cases, such as molsidomine or nitrosated drug substances (nitrosamine drug substance-related impurities [NDSRI]), continue to emerge. We therefore expect nitrosamine screenings to remain a high priority.

Keywords: N-nitroso compounds; nitrosamine drug substance-related impurities; nitrosamines; porous graphitic carbon; supercritical fluid chromatography.

MeSH terms

  • Dimethylnitrosamine
  • Humans
  • Molsidomine*
  • Nitrosamines*
  • Prevalence
  • Structure-Activity Relationship
  • Tablets

Substances

  • Molsidomine
  • Nitrosamines
  • Dimethylnitrosamine
  • Tablets