A new process-related impurity of ezetimibe was identified and characterized. The impurity is critical and common to most of the manufacturing routes of ezetimibe. Structural characterization using HMBC indicated the presence of a six-membered ring rather than a nine-membered ring as proposed by the innovator of ezetimibe. Prominently, the existing pharmacopoeial methods for ezetimibe are not capable of detecting this impurity. A control strategy was established by appropriate process control that is capable of purging the impurity to levels comfortably below the regulatory requirement. The formation of the diastereomer impurity during the demonstration of a scale-up batch under the optimized conditions is attributed to epimerization of ezetimibe induced by thermal degradation of the silylating agent.
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