Last updated: March 5, 2026 — Reviewed by CompoundTalk Analytical Chemistry Advisors
A Certificate of Analysis (COA) is a formal document issued by a testing laboratory that reports the results of analytical testing performed on a specific batch or lot of a substance. For compounded peptides such as semaglutide or tirzepatide, a COA typically includes identity confirmation, purity assessment, sterility testing, endotoxin levels, and other quality parameters [1].
COAs serve as the analytical "fingerprint" of a product batch. They are standard practice in pharmaceutical manufacturing under Current Good Manufacturing Practices (cGMP) and are required by USP General Chapters <1058> and <1059> for analytical data documentation [2].
A comprehensive COA for a compounded peptide should include the following tests. If any of these are missing, treat it as a potential red flag.
| Test | Method | What It Measures | Acceptable Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| Identity | LC-MS or MALDI-TOF Mass Spectrometry | Confirms the molecule is the correct peptide by measuring molecular weight | Observed MW within ±2 Da of theoretical MW |
| Purity (HPLC) | Reversed-Phase HPLC (RP-HPLC) | Percentage of the target peptide vs. impurities; the primary quality metric | ≥95% for research; ≥98% for pharmaceutical use |
| Peptide Content | Nitrogen analysis, amino acid analysis, or UV | Actual peptide weight as a percentage of total powder (includes salts, water, counterions) | Typically 60–85% (this is normal and does not indicate low quality) |
| Endotoxin | LAL (Limulus Amebocyte Lysate) or rFC | Bacterial endotoxin contamination; critical for injectable products | <5 EU/mg for parenteral use (USP <85>) |
| Sterility | USP <71> Sterility Test | Absence of viable microorganisms | No growth detected (pass/fail) |
| pH | Potentiometry (pH meter) | Acidity/alkalinity of reconstituted solution | Typically 7.0–8.0 for semaglutide formulations |
| Appearance | Visual inspection | Physical appearance of the lyophilized powder or solution | White to off-white lyophilized powder; clear, colorless solution |
| Residual Solvents | GC-MS or GC-FID | Leftover manufacturing solvents (TFA, acetonitrile, DMF) | Below ICH Q3C limits (e.g., TFA <0.1%) |
| Amino Acid Analysis | Ion-exchange chromatography | Confirms correct amino acid composition and ratios | Within ±10% of theoretical ratios |
| Water Content | Karl Fischer titration | Moisture content of lyophilized powder | <8% for lyophilized peptides |
HPLC (High-Performance Liquid Chromatography) purity is the single most important metric on a peptide COA. It represents the percentage of the desired peptide in the sample, as distinguished from synthesis impurities (deletion sequences, truncated peptides, oxidized forms, and other byproducts) [3].
When reviewing HPLC data, look for the chromatogram (a graphical trace showing peaks). The main peak should be tall and sharp, with very small or no secondary peaks. The purity is calculated as the area of the main peak divided by the total area of all peaks [3].
Mass spectrometry (MS) confirms that the molecule in the vial is actually the peptide it claims to be. The technique measures the mass-to-charge ratio (m/z) of ionized molecules. For semaglutide, the theoretical molecular weight is approximately 4,113.58 Da. The observed mass on the COA should match within a narrow margin (typically ±2 Da) [4].
Common mass spectrometry methods include:
Endotoxins are lipopolysaccharides (LPS) found in the cell walls of Gram-negative bacteria. They can cause fever, inflammation, sepsis, and organ failure if injected in sufficient quantities. The USP limit for parenteral (injectable) products is <5 EU/kg/hour for non-intrathecal routes. For a peptide COA, the result should typically read <5 EU/mg or specify "below detection limit" [5].
Not all COAs are created equal. Watch for these warning signs:
The following independent laboratories are commonly used in the peptide industry for third-party verification:
| Laboratory | Location | Accreditation | Services |
|---|---|---|---|
| Janoshik Analytical | Czech Republic | ISO 17025 | HPLC purity, MS identity, sterility, endotoxin |
| Valisure | New Haven, CT, USA | CLIA, ISO 17025 | Independent pharmaceutical testing, consumer petition lab |
| Eurofins Scientific | Global (50+ countries) | ISO 17025, GMP | Full pharmaceutical testing suite |
| SGS | Global | ISO 17025, GMP | Pharmaceutical QC, raw material testing |
| Nelson Labs | Salt Lake City, UT, USA | ISO 17025, FDA registered | Sterility, endotoxin, particulate matter |
The United States Pharmacopeia (USP) establishes reference standards for pharmaceutical substances. When a testing lab performs identity or purity analysis, they compare their results against a USP Reference Standard — a highly characterized, authenticated sample of the substance. For newer peptides like semaglutide, USP reference standards (USP Semaglutide RS) are available and should be used as the comparator in any rigorous analysis [6].
Below is an example of what a satisfactory COA for compounded semaglutide might look like:
| Test | Specification | Result | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Identity (LC-MS) | MW: 4113.58 ± 2 Da | 4113.61 Da | PASS |
| Purity (RP-HPLC) | ≥98.0% | 98.73% | PASS |
| Peptide Content | Report result | 78.2% | PASS |
| Endotoxin (LAL) | <5 EU/mg | <0.5 EU/mg | PASS |
| Sterility (USP <71>) | No growth | No growth detected | PASS |
| Appearance | White to off-white powder | White lyophilized powder | PASS |
| pH (reconstituted) | 7.0–8.0 | 7.4 | PASS |
| Water Content (KF) | <8.0% | 4.1% | PASS |
| Residual TFA | <0.1% | 0.03% | PASS |