Peptides are an increasingly important group of biomarkers and pharmaceuticals. The accurate purity characterization of peptide
calibrators is critical for the development of reference measurement systems for laboratory medicine and quality control of
pharmaceuticals. The peptides used for these purposes are increasingly produced through peptide synthesis. Various approaches
(for example mass balance, amino acid analysis, qNMR, and nitrogen determination) can be applied to accurately value assign
the purity of peptide calibrators. However, all purity assessment approaches require a correction for structurally related peptide
impurities in order to avoid biases. Liquid chromatography coupled to high resolut... More
Peptides are an increasingly important group of biomarkers and pharmaceuticals. The accurate purity characterization of peptide
calibrators is critical for the development of reference measurement systems for laboratory medicine and quality control of
pharmaceuticals. The peptides used for these purposes are increasingly produced through peptide synthesis. Various approaches
(for example mass balance, amino acid analysis, qNMR, and nitrogen determination) can be applied to accurately value assign
the purity of peptide calibrators. However, all purity assessment approaches require a correction for structurally related peptide
impurities in order to avoid biases. Liquid chromatography coupled to high resolution mass spectrometry (LC-hrMS) has become
the key technique for the identification and accurate quantification of structurally related peptide impurities in intact peptide
calibrator materials. In this study, LC-hrMS-based methods were developed and validated in-house for the identification and
quantification of structurally related peptide impurities in a synthetic human C-peptide (hCP) material, which served as a study
material for an international comparison looking at the competencies of laboratories to perform peptide purity mass fraction
assignments. More than 65 impurities were identified, confirmed, and accurately quantified by using LC-hrMS. The total mass
fraction of all structurally related peptide impurities in the hCP study material was estimated to be 83.3 mg/g with an associated
expanded uncertainty of 3.0 mg/g (k = 2). The calibration hierarchy concept used for the quantification of individual impurities is
described in detail.