A pharmaceutical development team submits a New Drug Submission to Health Canada. During the review, the chemistry and manufacturing controls (CMC) reviewer issues a deficiency notice: the HPLC method validation report for the assay method does not include intermediate precision data, and the linearity range does not cover the full specification range for degradation products. The submission is put on hold while the laboratory generates the missing data — a delay that could have been avoided with a more thorough validation protocol.
This article is for analytical chemists, quality professionals, and regulatory affairs teams responsible for designing and documenting HPLC method validations for Health Canada drug submissions. We cover the ICH Q2(R1) validation characteristics, the specific requirements for different method types, and the documentation standards that Health Canada reviewers expect.
ICH Q2(R1), formally titled Validation of Analytical Procedures: Text and Methodology, is the primary ICH guideline governing analytical method validation for pharmaceutical applications. Health Canada has adopted ICH Q2(R1) as the standard for method validation data submitted in drug submissions. The guideline applies to analytical procedures used to test drug substances and drug products, including assay methods, impurity methods, and dissolution methods.
ICH Q2(R1) defines eight validation characteristics that may need to be assessed depending on the type of analytical procedure:
Not all characteristics are required for every method type. ICH Q2(R1) provides a matrix indicating which characteristics apply to identification tests, impurity tests (limit and quantitative), and assay methods. Understanding this matrix is essential for designing a validation protocol that will satisfy Health Canada reviewers.
For HPLC assay methods, the following characteristics are required:
Specificity: The method must demonstrate that it measures the analyte of interest without interference from degradation products, excipients, or other components. For HPLC methods, specificity is typically demonstrated by:
Linearity: The method must demonstrate a linear relationship between the detector response and the analyte concentration over the intended range. For assay methods, the range is typically 80–120% of the nominal concentration. Linearity is assessed using a minimum of five concentration levels, and the results are evaluated by linear regression. The correlation coefficient (r²) should be ≥ 0.999 for assay methods, though this is a guideline rather than a hard requirement — the linearity data should be evaluated in the context of the overall validation.
Range: The validated range must encompass the concentrations at which the method will be used. For assay methods, this is typically 80–120% of the nominal concentration. For methods that will also be used to quantify degradation products, the range must extend to the reporting threshold and specification limit for those products.
Accuracy: The method must demonstrate that it produces results close to the true value. For HPLC assay methods, accuracy is typically assessed by recovery studies — adding known amounts of the analyte to the matrix and measuring the recovery. A minimum of nine determinations across three concentration levels (three replicates at each level) is recommended. Acceptance criteria for recovery are typically 98–102% for assay methods, though the criteria should be justified based on the intended use.
Precision: ICH Q2(R1) requires two levels of precision for assay methods:
Robustness: The method must demonstrate that small, deliberate variations in method parameters (e.g., mobile phase composition, flow rate, column temperature, column lot) do not significantly affect the results. Robustness is typically assessed using a Plackett-Burman or fractional factorial experimental design. Robustness data also supports the definition of system suitability criteria.
For HPLC methods used to quantify degradation products, the validation requirements are more extensive in some areas:
Specificity: Must demonstrate resolution between all known degradation products and the main peak, and between individual degradation products. If degradation products are not available as reference standards, forced degradation studies must be used to generate them in situ.
Linearity and Range: The range must extend from the reporting threshold (typically 0.05% or the analytical detection limit, whichever is higher) to at least 120% of the specification limit. For degradation products present at low levels, this may require a range of 0.05–0.5% of the nominal analyte concentration, which places significant demands on the method’s sensitivity and linearity.
Accuracy: Recovery studies at the reporting threshold, the specification limit, and an intermediate level. Acceptance criteria for impurity methods are typically 80–120%, reflecting the greater analytical challenge at low concentrations.
Detection Limit and Quantitation Limit: For quantitative impurity methods, the QL must be at or below the reporting threshold. The DL and QL should be determined experimentally (e.g., signal-to-noise ratio method) and confirmed by analysis of samples at the DL and QL concentrations.
For HPLC methods used in dissolution testing, the validation requirements are similar to assay methods, with additional considerations for the dissolution medium matrix. Specificity must demonstrate that the dissolution medium components do not interfere with the analyte peak. The validated range should cover the full range of dissolution results expected during the study.
System suitability testing (SST) is not a validation characteristic per se, but it is an integral part of HPLC method validation and use. SST parameters — typically including resolution, tailing factor, theoretical plate count, and %RSD for replicate injections of the reference standard — must be defined and justified based on the validation data.
Health Canada reviewers expect that SST criteria are defined in the method procedure and that SST is performed at the beginning of each analytical run. SST failures must be investigated and documented.
The method validation report submitted to Health Canada should include:
The validation report should be cross-referenced to the method procedure, and both documents should be submitted together. Health Canada reviewers will assess whether the validation data supports the method as written.
Assay Methods
Impurity Methods
Documentation
Method validation is a technical discipline with significant regulatory consequences. Requirements may vary depending on the method type, the analyte, and the specific application. We recommend having validation protocols reviewed by a regulatory expert before execution to avoid generating data that does not satisfy Health Canada’s requirements.
At Androxa, we provide HPLC method development, validation, and transfer services for pharmaceutical drug submissions in Canada. Contact our analytical team at testing-lab.ca to discuss your method validation needs.