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Triptorelin

Decapeptyl, Trelstar, Gonapeptyl, Pamorelin

Quick Stats
Studies 178
Trials 100
Score 1
2025 pubmed

AQbD-based development of a stability-indicating UHPLC-PDA-QDa method for triptorelin in parenteral formulations.

Afonso Urich. Jesús Alberto JA; Marko. Viktoria V; Fedorko. Anna A; Jeremic. Dalibor D

Key Findings

  • A quick 5‑minute UHPLC method was optimized for triptorelin analysis
  • The method works on a specific C18 column at 53.8 °C with a defined buffer and acetonitrile mix
  • Forced‑degradation tests showed the method can detect acid, base, oxidative, and heat‑induced breakdown

Practical Outcomes

  • For DIY biohackers, this study mainly shows that reliable lab tools exist to verify triptorelin purity, but it doesn’t provide direct guidance on how to use the peptide for health or performance. It’s more relevant for labs producing or testing the drug than for personal experimentation.

Summary

Scientists created a lab test that reliably measures how stable the peptide drug triptorelin is in injectable forms, using a fast chromatography technique. The method checks if the drug breaks down under different stress conditions, but it doesn’t give dosing or performance advice for personal use.

Abstract

A robust, stability-indicating analytical method for the quantification of triptorelin in suspension formulations was developed using reverse-phase ultra (high)-performance liquid chromatography (RP-UHPLC) under the Analytical Quality by Design (AQbD) framework. This systematic, risk-based approach enabled the efficient identification and optimization of critical method parameters, reducing reliance on traditional trial-and-error procedures. Key variables such as column type, temperature, gradient profile, and organic modifier composition were evaluated. Optimal chromatographic conditions were achieved using a YMC Triart C18 column (50 &#xd7; 2.1 mm, 1.9 &#x3bc;m) at 53.8 &#xb0;C. The mobile phase consisted of 10 mM ammonium formate buffer (pH 5.0) as phase A and acetonitrile containing 0.1% formic acid as phase B. A short 5 minute gradient elution at 0.48 mL min<sup>-1</sup>, with UV detection at 280 nm, was applied. The method was subjected to forced degradation studies under hydrolytic (acidic and basic), oxidative, and thermal stress conditions to demonstrate its stability-indicating capability. These results support its overall suitability for routine quality control and regulatory applications in peptide drug analysis.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2025

Date

2025-08-15T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1039/d5ay00919g

References

28