Systematic review on fingerprinting development to determine adulteration of Chinese herbal medicines

Phytomedicine. 2024 Apr 22:129:155667. doi: 10.1016/j.phymed.2024.155667. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Background: It has been a current research hospots using fingerprinting technology for quality control of Chinese herbal medicines (CHMs), which provides a scientific basis for establishment of overall quality control in accordance with the characteristics of CHMs. The fingerprinting technology for CHMs is diverse, and the research field covers many disciplines, such as analytical chemistry, pharmacology, pharmaceutics, biochemistry, and molecular biology.

Purpose: To effectively understand the key areas and future directions of research regarding the fingerprint and adulteration of CHMs.

Methods/results: this paper analyzed 879 articles in this field in the Web of Science Core Collection from 2000 to 2023 with CiteSpace and VOSviewer, and systematically assessed the research process, hotspots, topic distribution among disciplines, etc. The most prominent contributors of fingerprint and adulteration of CHMs research are mainly from China, India, the United States, England, and Brazil. The knowledge domains of fingerprint and adulteration of CHMs research focus mainly on the topics of molecular authentication, DNA barcoding, HPLC, near-infrared spectroscopy, manage data, chemometrics, and electrochemical fingerprinting. Most countries have recognized the pharmaceutical potential of natural products, and have paid more attention to the fingerprint and adulteration of CHMs in the past decade. Future the research tends to focus more on molecular identification and authentication, and electrochemical and chromatographic fingerprinting in controlling the adulteration of CHMs.

Conclusion: This research provides a valuable reference for scholars in related fields to analyze existing research results, understand the development trend, and explore new research directions.

Keywords: Adulteration; Authenticity; Chromatography; Electrochemical fingerprinting; Molecular identification; Spectroscopy.