Regulatory guidance increasingly emphasizes analytical procedure understanding, performance‑based validation, and life‑cycle management. At the same time, growing drug‑modality complexity makes determining whether a method is truly fit‑for‑purpose more challenging. Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy stands out as an analytical technology, providing direct, absolute structural and quantitative information grounded in well‑defined physical principles. This supports enhanced analytical procedure life‑cycle management while offering the flexibility and robustness required by modern quality control concepts. Applied across the pharmaceutical industry, NMR addresses diverse analytical objectives and is particularly effective for polysaccharide analysis, enabling identity testing, impurity profiling, and linkage‑specific quantification from a single experiment, without derivatization or separation.
In this webinar, we examine how Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy supports analytically sound, fit‑for‑purpose methods across the pharmaceutical product life cycle, in line with evolving regulatory expectations for analytical procedure understanding. We highlight representative NMR applications ranging from early candidate screening and structure-activity relationship studies to data‑driven process understanding, optimization, and routine use from R&D through Quality Control.
A focused case study addresses the analytically challenging quantification of the α‑1,6 branching ratio in maltodextrin. Using an 80 MHz benchtop ¹H NMR spectrometer and a disaccharide model system, we illustrate how acquisition strategy, solvent suppression, and analysis mode directly impact method performance. Multiple analytical procedure performance assessment frameworks are applied and compared, demonstrating how framework selection influences fitness‑for‑purpose conclusions and supports informed, risk‑based development decisions in this analytically challenging case.
Tuesday, June 9 2026
5 PM CEST
Discover how NMR is applied across pharmaceutical development and quality control to address complex analytical questions. Understand when and how NMR methods can be considered fit‑for‑purpose in practice. Gain a practical understanding of how to evaluate analytical performance using different assessment frameworks, and see how benchtop NMR can be used to tackle challenging quantitative applications under realistic, application‑driven conditions.