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  2. Characterisation of Antisense Oligonucleotides by Ion-Pair Reversed-Phase UHPLC-HRMS: Method development using Design of Experiments

Characterisation of Antisense Oligonucleotides by Ion-Pair Reversed-Phase UHPLC-HRMS: Method development using Design of Experiments

  • J Mass Spectrom. 2026 Apr;61(4):e70049. doi: 10.1002/jms.70049.
Antonio Triolo 1 Fabiana Tavani 1 Prisca Barnini 2 Sandra Furlanetto 2 Serena Orlandini 2
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Laboratory of Advanced Analytics, Menarini Ricerche Spa, Florence, Italy.
  • 2 Department of Chemistry "Ugo Schiff", University of Florence, Florence, Italy.
Abstract

The quality control of therapeutic Antisense Oligonucleotides (ASOs) poses significant analytical challenges due to the complexity of their synthesis and degradation processes and the need to ensure the safety and efficacy of active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs). In this study, an ion-pair reversed-phase ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography-high-resolution mass spectrometry (IP-RP-UHPLC-HRMS) method based on Orbitrap technology was developed using fomivirsen (FMV) and tofersen (TFR) as model compounds. A preliminary scouting phase was dedicated to selecting the type of ion-pair reagent and MS parameters settings (sheath gas, auxiliary gas temperature and S-lens), based on MS spectrum quality (charge state distribution, presence of adducts and in-source fragments), MS signal height and chromatographic peak shape. Design of Experiments (DoE) through response surface methodology was employed to evaluate the effects of the following factors in depth: concentration of the ion pair reagent N,N-diisopropylethylamine and of 1,1,1,3,3,3-hexafluoroisopropanol in the mobile phase and elution gradient slope. The responses selected were the UV height and baseline width of the main peak of the APIs, as well as the resolutions between selected impurities from their extracted MS chromatograms. A multidimensional space (sweet spot) was defined in which the response requirements were met, enabling multicriteria optimisation and the set-up of two distinct IP-RP-UHPLC-MS methods for FMV and TFR characterisation, based on shared mobile phase components and MS parameters. All four FMV impurities and 13 out of 15 detected TFR impurities were identified above 0.1%. DoE approach has been demonstrated to be an effective tool for achieving a balance between sensitivity and selectivity in the analysis of ASOs, identifying optimum conditions tailored to oligonucleotide type and ion-pair agent and paving the way for more structured development processes, as recommended by recent regulatory requirements for pharmaceutical analytical procedure development.

Keywords

antisense oligonucleotides; design of experiments; impurities characterisation; ion‐pair reversed‐phase UHPLC‐HRMS; response surface methodology.

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