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1.
A reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatographic method has been developed and validated for the quantification of the novel anticancer drug Ecteinascidin 743 in human plasma. The sample pretreatment of the plasma samples involved a solid-phase extraction (SPE) on cyano columns. Propyl-p-hydroxybenzoate was added after the sample pretreatment to correct for variability in injection volumes. The separation was performed on a Zorbax SB-C18 column (75×4.6 mm I.D., particle size 3.5 μm) with acetonitrile–25 mM phosphate buffer, pH 5.0 (70:30, v/v) as the mobile phase. The flow-rate was 1.0 ml/min and the eluent was monitored at 210 nm. The accuracies and precisions of the assay fall within ±15% for all quality control samples and within ±20% for the lower limit of quantitation, which was 1.0 ng/ml using 500 μl of plasma. The overall recovery of the sample pretreatment procedure for Ecteinascidin 743 was 87.0±5.9%. The drug was found to be stable in human plasma at −30°C for at least 2 months. At room temperature Ecteinascidin 743 was stable in human plasma for 5 h at most.  相似文献   

2.
CI-980, a 1-deaza-7,8-dihydropteridine, is a novel anticancer agent that is a potent mitotic inhibitor acting as a tubulin binder similar to the vinca alkaloids. CI-980 has shown equivalent or superior anticancer activity in vitro compared to vincristine and retains full activity against vincristine resistant tumors in vitro. A high-performance liquid chromatographic (HPLC) assay was developed and validated for human plasma and urine to support Phase 1 clinical trials. CI-980 and PD 080658, internal standard, were isolated from 2-ml samples of human plasma and urine by solid-phase extraction with Bond-Elut C18 cartridges. Urine samples must be pretreated with bovine serum albumin (BSA) to minimize the binding of CI-980 to glass and some plastics. The eluate from the cartridges for both matrices was evaporated to dryness and taken up in mobile phase. Zorbax RX C18 columns, mobile phase buffer of 10 mM ammonium dihydrogen phosphate at pH 7.5 and a flow--rate of 0.75 ml/min were used for both matrices. Column dimensions, column temperature and mobile phase acetonitrile-buffer ratio were 300 mm × 4.6 mm I.D., 30°C and 38:62 (v/v), respectively, for the plasma assay and 250 mm × 4.6 mm I.D., 35°C and 40:60 (v/v), respectively, for the urine assay. Column effluent was monitored fluorometrically for the plasma method using excitation and emission wavelengths of 388 nm and 473 nm, respectively. Ultraviolet detection at 380 nm was used for the urine method. Peak-area ratios were proportional to CI-980 concentrations from 0.2 to 25 ng/ml and 1 to 100 ng/ml for plasma and urine, respectively. CI-980 in water will bind to glass and plastics but not PTFE or stainless steel. Urine calibration standards were frozen prior to use in order to compensate for loss of CI-980 due to freezing in this matrix. The accuracy of the assay was within 4.7%, with a precision of 5.6% for both matrices. Recoveries ranged from 93.8 to 102% and 90.7 to 92.3% for plasma and urine, respectively. CI-980 was stable in plasma and urine for at least 275 and 217 days, respectively, when stored at −70°C. The assay is suitable for studying the clinical pharmacokinetics of CI-980.  相似文献   

3.
Karenitecin is a novel, highly lipophilic camptothecin derivative with potent anticancer potential. We have developed a sensitive high-performance liquid chromatographic method for the determination of karenitecin concentration in human plasma and urine. Karenitecin was isolated from human plasma and urine using solid-phase extraction. Separation was achieved by gradient elution, using a water and acetonitrile mobile phase, on an ODS analytical column. Karenitecin was detected using fluorescence detection at excitation and emission wavelengths of 370 and 490 nm, respectively. Retention time for karenitecin was 16.2±0.5 min and 8.0±0.2 min for camptothecin, the internal standard. The karenitecin peak was baseline resolved, with the nearest peak at 3.1 min distance. Using normal volunteer plasma and urine from multiple individuals, as well as samples from the 50 patients analyzed to date, no interfering peaks were detected. Inter- and intra-day coefficients of variance were <4.4 and 7.1% for plasma and <4.9 and 11.6% for urine. Assay precision, based on an extracted karenitecin standard plasma sample of 2.5 ng/ml, was +4.46% with a mean accuracy of 92.4%. For extracted karenitecin standard urine samples of 2.5 ng/ml assay precision was +2.35% with a mean accuracy of 99.5%. The mean recovery of karenitecin, at plasma concentrations of 1.0 and 50 ng/ml, was 81.9 and 87.8% respectively. In urine, at concentrations of 1.5 and 50 ng/ml, the mean recoveries were 90.3 and 78.4% respectively. The lower limit of detection (LLD) for karenitecin was 0.5 ng/ml in plasma and 1.0 ng/ml in urine. The lower limit of quantification (LLQ) for karenitecin was 1 ng/ml and 1.5 ng/ml for plasma and urine, respectively. Stability studies indicate that when frozen at −70°C, karenitecin is stable in human plasma for up to 3 months and in human urine for up to 1 month. This method is useful for the quantification of karenitecin in plasma and urine samples for clinical pharmacology studies in patients receiving this agent in clinical trials.  相似文献   

4.
A rapid, sensitive and selective high-performance liquid chromatographic (HPLC) assay was developed for the determination of cibenzoline (Cipralan TM) in human plasma and urine. The assay involves the extraction of the compound into benzene from plasma or urine buffered to pH 11 and HPLC analysis of the residue dissolved in acetonitrile---phosphate buffer (0.015 mol/1, pH 6.0) (80:20). A 10-μ ion-exchange (sulfonate) column was used with acetonitrile—phosphate buffer (0.015 mol/1, pH 6.0) (80:20) as the mobile phase. UV detection at 214 nm was used for quantitation with the di-p-methyl analogue of cibenzoline as the internal standard.The recovery of cibenzoline in the assay ranged from 60 to 70% and was validated in human plasma and urine in the concentration range of 10–1000 ng/ml and 50–5000 ng/ml, respectively. A normal-phase HPLC assay was developed for the determination of the imidazole metabolite of cibenzoline. The assays were applied to the determination of plasma and urine concentrations of cibenzoline and trace amounts of its imidazole metabolite following oral administration of cibenzoline succinate to two human subjects.  相似文献   

5.
A high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) method for the estimation of pravastatin in human plasma and urine samples has been developed. The preparation of the samples was performed by automated solid phase extraction using clonazepam as internal standard. The compounds were separated by isocratic reversed-phase HPLC (C(18)) and detected at 239 nm. The method was linear up to concentrations of 200 ng/ml in plasma and 2000 ng/ml in urine. The intra-assay variability for pravastatin in plasma ranged from 0.9% to 3.5% and from 2.5% to 5.3% in urine. The inter-assay variability ranged from 9.1% to 10.2% in plasma and from 3.9% to 7.5% in urine. The validated limits of quantification were 1.9 ng/ml for plasma and 125 ng/ml for urine estimation. These method characteristics allowed the determination of the pharmacokinetic parameters of pravastatin after administration of therapeutic doses.  相似文献   

6.
A simple and sensitive high-performance liquid chromatographic (HPLC) method with UV absorbance detection is described for the quantification of donepezil, a centrally and selectively acting acetyleholinesterase inhibitor, in human plasma. After sample alkalinization with 0.5 ml of NaOH (0.1 M), the test compound was extracted from I ml of plasma using isopropanol-hexane (3:97, v/v). The organic phase was back-extracted with 75 microl of HCl (0.1 M) and 50 microl of the acid solution was injected into a C18 STR ODS-II analytical column (5 microm, 150x4.6 mm I.D.). The mobile phase consisted of phosphate buffer (0.02 M, pH 4.6), perchloric acid (6 M) and acetonitrile (59.5:0.5:40, v/v) and was delivered at a flow-rate of 1.0 ml/min at 40 degrees C. The peak was detected using a UV detector set at 315 nm, and the total time for a chromatographic separation was approximately 8 min. The method was validated for the concentration range 3-90 ng/ml. Mean recoveries were 89-98%. Intra- and inter-day relative standard deviations were less than 7.3 and 7.6%, respectively, at the concentrations ranging from 3 to 90 ng/ml. The method shows good specificity with respect to commonly prescribed psychotropic drugs, and it could be successfully applied for pharmacokinetic studies and therapeutic drug monitoring.  相似文献   

7.
A reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography method was developed and validated for the quantitation of pemetrexed (LY231514, ALIMTA) in human urine and plasma. Plasma samples were spiked with the internal standard lometrexol and extracted using Certify II columns. Pemetrexed was assayed in diluted urine by an external calibration method. A C8 column was used for the separation of analytes with a mobile phase composed of sodium formate buffer and acetonitrile. Between- and within-day precision and accuracy were acceptable down to the limit of quantitation of 5 ng/ml in plasma. This method was used successfully for an investigation of the disposition of pemetrexed in patients receiving 500 mg/m2 as a 10-min infusion.  相似文献   

8.
A sensitive and selective liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry method (LC-MS-MS) for the simultaneous estimation of bulaquine and primaquine has been developed and validated in monkey plasma. The mobile phase consisted of acetonitrile/ammonium acetate buffer (20 mM, pH 6) (50:50 v/v) at a flow-rate of 1 ml/min. The chromatographic separations were achieved on two spheri cyano columns (5 microm, 30 x 4.6 mm I.D.) connected in series. The quantitation was carried out using a Micromass LC-MS-MS with an electrospray source in the multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) mode. The analytes were quantified from the summed total ion value of their two most intense molecular transitions. This is another novel method leading to increased sensitivity and precision. A simple liquid-liquid extraction with 2 x 1.0 ml n-hexane/ethyl acetate/dimethyloctyl amine (90:10:0.05, v/v) was utilized. The method was validated in terms of recovery, linearity, accuracy and precision (within- and between-assay variation). The recoveries from spiked control samples were >or=90 and 50% for bulaquine and primaquine, respectively. Linearity in plasma was observed over a dynamic range of 1.56-400 and 3.91-1000 ng/ml for bulaquine and primaquine, respectively.  相似文献   

9.
A sensitive and selective high-performance liquid chromatographic method for the simultaneous determination of a new angiotensin II receptor blocking agent, losartan (DuP 753, MK-954, I), and its active metabolite, EXP3174 (II), in human plasma or urine is described. The two analytes and internal standard are extracted from plasma and urine at pH 2.5 by liquid—liquid extraction and analyzed on a cyano column with ultraviolet detection at 254 nm. The mobile phase is composed of acetonitrile and phosphate buffer at pH 2.5. The limit of quantification for both compounds in plasma is 5 ng/ml. The limit in urine is 20 and 10 ng/ml for I and II, respectively. The assay described has been successfully applied to samples from pharmacokinetic studies.  相似文献   

10.
A bioanalytical method for the analysis of oseltamivir (OP) and its metabolite oseltamivir carboxylate (OC) in human plasma, saliva and urine using off-line solid-phase extraction and liquid chromatography coupled to positive tandem mass spectroscopy has been developed and validated. OP and OC were analysed on a ZIC-HILIC column (50 mm x 2.1 mm) using a mobile phase gradient containing acetonitrile-ammonium acetate buffer (pH 3.5; 10mM) at a flow rate of 500 microL/min. The method was validated according to published FDA guidelines and showed excellent performance. The lower limit of quantification for OP was determined to be 1, 1 and 5 ng/mL for plasma, saliva and urine, respectively and for OC was 10, 10 and 30 ng/mL for plasma, saliva and urine, respectively. The upper limit of quantification for OP was determined to be 600, 300 and 1500 ng/mL for plasma, saliva and urine, respectively and for OC was 10,000, 10,000 and 30,000 ng/mL for plasma, saliva and urine, respectively. The within-day and between-day precisions expressed as R.S.D., were lower than 5% at all tested concentrations for all matrices and below 12% at the lower limit of quantification. Validation of over-curve samples ensured that it would be possible with dilution if samples went outside the calibration range. Matrix effects were thoroughly evaluated both graphically and quantitatively. No matrix effects were detected for OP or OC in plasma or saliva. Residues from the urine matrix (most likely salts) caused some ion suppression for both OP and its deuterated internal standard but had no effect on OC or its deuterated internal standard. The suppression did not affect the quantification of OP.  相似文献   

11.
A sensitive and specific method was developed and validated for the quantitation of quercetin in human plasma and urine. The application of liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC/MS/MS) with a TurboIonspray (TIS) interface in negative mode under multiple reactions monitoring was investigated. Chromatographic separation was achieved on a C12 column using a mobile phase of acetonitrile/water with 0.2% formic acid (pH 2.4) (40/60, v/v). The detection limit was 100 pg/ml and the lower limit of quantification was 500 pg/ml for plasma samples; the detection limit was 500 pg/ml and the lower limit of quantification was 1 ng/ml for urine samples. The calibration curve was linear from 1 to 800 ng/ml for plasma samples and was linear from 1 to 200 and 50 to 2000 ng/ml for urine samples. All the intra- and inter-day coefficients of variation were less than 11% and intra- and inter-day accuracies were within +/-15% of the known concentrations. This represents a LC/MS/MS assay with the sensitivity and specificity necessary to determine quercetin in human plasma and urine. This assay was used to determine both parent quercetin and the quercetin after enzymatic hydrolysis with beta-glucuronidase/sulfatase in human plasma and urine samples following the ingestion of quercetin 500 mg capsules.  相似文献   

12.
A high-performance liquid chromatographic method was developed for the determination of a new non-narcotic analgesic, DA-5018 (I), in rat plasma, urine and bile samples, using propranolol for plasma samples and protriptyline for urine and bile samples as internal standards. The method involved extraction followed by injection of 100 μl of the aqueous layer onto a C18 reversed-phase column. The mobile phases were 5 mM methanesulfonic acid with 10 mM NaH2PO4 (pH 2.5)-acetonitrile, 70:30 (v/v) for plasma samples and 75:25 (v/v) for urine and bile samples. The flow-rates were 1.0 ml/min for plasma samples and 1.2 ml/min for urine and bile samples. The column effluent was monitored by a fluorescence detector with an excitation wavelength of 270 nm and an emission wavelength of 330 nm. The retention time for I was 4.8 min in plasma samples and 10.0 min in urine and bile samples. The detection limits for I in rat plasma, urine and bile were 20, 100 and 100 ng/ml, respectively. There was no interference from endogenous substances.  相似文献   

13.
A high-performance liquid chromatographic assay method for the quantitation of ipecac alkaloids (cephaeline and emetine) in human plasma and urine is described. Human plasma or urine was extracted with diethylether under alkaline conditions following the addition of an internal standard. Concentrations of alkaloids and internal standard were determined by octadecylsilica chromatographic separation (Symmetry C18 columns, plasma analysis; 15 cm×4.6 mm I.D., 5 μm particle size, urine analysis; 7.5 cm×4.6 mm I.D., 5 μm particle size). The mobile phase consisted of buffer (20 mmol/l 1-heptanesulfonic acid sodium salt, adjusted to pH 4.0 with acetic acid)–methanol (51:49, v/v). Eluate fluorescence was monitored at 285/316 nm. The lowest quantitation limits of cephaeline and emetine were 1 and 2.5 ng/ml, respectively, in plasma, and 5 ng/ml in urine. Intra- and inter-day relative standard deviations were below 15%. The assay is sensitive, specific and applicable to pharmacokinetic studies in humans.  相似文献   

14.
A column switching high performance liquid chromatographic method with estimable sensitivity and accuracy was developed for the determination of cetirizine and ambroxol in human plasma using nebivolol as the internal standard. Plasma samples were prepared by liquid-liquid extraction in methylene chloride and a mixture of diethylether (80:20, v/v). The extracted samples were injected into a multifunctional clean-up column Supelcosil LCABZ (50 mm × 4.6 mm, 5 μm particle size) using mobile phase 1 comprising acetonitrile-phosphate buffer (pH 3.5; 20 mM) (20:80, v/v). The eluate of cetirizine and ambroxol were separated to an analytical Kromasil C(8) micro bore column (50 mm × 0.3 mm, 5 μm particle size) via a column switching device. A Kromasil C(18) analytical column (250 mm × 2.1 mm, 5 μm particle size) was used as a separation column. Mobile phase 2 consisting acetonitrile-triethylamine (0.5%) in phosphate buffer (pH 3.5; 20mM) (55:45, v/v) was used for the compound elution. The eluents were detected at 230 nm with photodiode array detector. An aliquot of 150 μl of plasma sample was introduced into the pretreatment column via the auto sampler using mobile phase 1 at a flow rate of 0.5 ml/min, column switching valve being positioned at A. The pretreatment column retained cetirizine, ambroxol and nebivolol (IS) in the column leaving the residual proteins of plasma eluted in void volume and drained out. The switching valve was shifted to position B at 7.5 min. Cetirizine, ambroxol and IS were eluted from the pretreatment column between 7. 5 and 11.5 min and introduced to the concentration column. Finally, cetirizine, ambroxol and IS were introduced to the separation column by switching valve using mobile phase 2 at a flow rate of 0.4 ml/min. During the analysis the pretreatment column was washed for the next analysis and resume to the position A. The total run time was 25 min for a sample. The procedure was repeated for urine analysis also. The method was linear from 2 to 450 ng/ml and 7-300 ng/ml for cetirizine and ambroxol respectively in plasma and 1-500 ng/ml and 5-400 ng/ml, respectively for cetirizine and ambroxol in urine. Intra-day and inter-day precision of cetirizine and ambroxol was below 15% in terms of coefficient of variation and accuracy of cetirizine and ambroxol was ranged from 94 to 101.6% and 91.1 to 100.2%, respectively. The method demonstrated high sensitivity and selectivity and therefore, applied to evaluate pharmacokinetics of cetirizine and ambroxol in healthy human volunteer after a single oral administration. Urine samples obtained from healthy human volunteers and clinical subjects with renal impairment have also been analyzed by the method to compare the elimination pattern. The method was precise and accurate for the estimation of cetirizine and ambroxol both in blood and in urine.  相似文献   

15.
A simple, sensitive and specific automated SPE-LC-MS-MS assay was developed and validated for determination of valdecoxib (I), its hydroxylated metabolite (II) and carboxylic acid metabolite (III) in human urine. The analytes (I, II and III) and a structural analogue internal standard (I.S.) were extracted on a C(18) solid-phase extraction cartridge using a Zymark RapidTrace automation system. The chromatographic separation was performed on a narrow-bore reverse phase HPLC column with a mobile phase of acetonitrile-water (50:50, v/v) containing 10 mM 4-methylmorpholine (pH 6.0). The analytes were ionized using negative electrospray mass spectrometry, then detected by multiple reaction monitoring with a tandem mass spectrometer. The precursor to product ion transitions of m/z 313-->118, m/z 329-->196 and m/z 343-->196 were used to measure I, II and III, respectively. The assay exhibited a linear dynamic range of 1-200 ng/ml for I and II and 2-200 ng/ml for III in human urine. The lower limit of quantitation was 1 ng/ml for I and II and 2 ng/ml for III. Acceptable precision and accuracy were obtained for concentrations over the standard curve ranges. Run time of 5.5 min for each sample made it possible to analyze a throughput of 70 human urine samples per run. The assay has been successfully used to analyze human urine samples to support clinical phase I and II studies.  相似文献   

16.
An HPLC method for determining quercetin in human plasma and urine is presented for application to the pharmacokinetic study of rutin. Isocratic reversed-phase HPLC was employed for the quantitative analysis by using kaempferol as an internal standard. Solid-phase extraction was performed on an Oasis HLB cartridge (>95% recovery). The HPLC assay was carried out using a Luna ODS-2 column (150 x 2.1 mm I.D., 5 microm particle size). The mobile phase was acetonitrile-10 mM ammonium acetate solution containing 0.3 mM EDTA-glacial acetic acid, 29:70:1 (v/v, pH 3.9) and 26:73:1 (v/v, pH 3.9) for the determination of plasma and urinary quercetin, respectively. The flow-rate was 0.3 ml/min and the detection wavelength was set at 370 nm. Calibration of the overall analytical procedure gave a linear signal (r>0.999) over a concentration range of 4-700 ng/ml of quercetin in plasma and 20-1000 ng/ml of quercetin in urine. The lower limit of quantification was approximately 7 ng/ml of quercetin in plasma and approximately 35 ng/ml in urine. The detection limit (defined at a signal-to-noise ratio of about 3) was approximately 0.35 ng/ml in plasma and urine. A preliminary experiment to investigate the plasma concentration and urinary excretion of quercetin after oral administration of 200 mg of rutin to a healthy volunteer demonstrated that the present method was suitable for determining quercetin in human plasma and urine.  相似文献   

17.
Column-switching HPLC methods have been developed and validated for the determination of a new antihypertensive prodrug, TCV-116 (I), and its metabolites, CV-11974 (II) and CV-15959 (III), in human serum and urine. Initial sample cleanup was achieved by extracting the analytes into an organic solvent. After chromatographing on an ODS column with a mobile phase consisting of acetonitrile and an acidic phosphate buffer, the zone of the analyte's retention was heart-cut onto a second ODS column with a mobile phase of acetonitrile and a phosphate buffer at a higher pH. Complete separation of the analytes and the endogenous peaks was accomplished by the two-dimensional chromatography. Good precision and linearity of the calibration standards, as well as the inter-day and intra-day precision and accuracy of quality control samples, were achieved. The limit of quantitation (LOQ), using 0.5 ml of serum, was 2 ng/ml for I, 0.8 ng/ml for II, and 0.5 ng/ml for III. The LOQ for urine sample was 10 ng/ml for II and III. Stability of the analytes during storage, extraction, and chromatography processes was established. The results illustrate the versatile application of column switching to method development of multiple analytes in various biological matrices. The methods have been successfully used for the analyses of I and its metabolites in thousands of clinical samples to provide pharmacokinetics data.  相似文献   

18.
An analytical method for the determination of artemether (A) and its metabolite dihydroartemisinin (DHA) in human plasma has been developed and validated. The method is based on high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and electrochemical detection in the reductive mode. A, DHA and artemisinin, the internal standard (I.S.), were extracted from plasma (1 ml) with 1-chlorobutane—isooctane (55:45, v/v). The solvent was transferred, evaporated to dryness under nitrogen and the residue dissolved in 600 μl of water-ethyl alcohol (50:50, v/v). Chromatography was performed on a Nova-Pak CN, 4 μm analytical column (150 mm×3.9 mm I.D.) at 35°C. The mobile phase consisted of pH 5 acetate—acetonitrile (85:15, v/v) at a flow-rate of 1 ml/min. The analytes were detected by electrochemical detection in the reductive mode at a potential of −1.0 V Intra-day accuracy and precision were assessed from the relative recoveries (found concentration in % of the nominal value) of spiked samples analysed on the same day (concentration range 10.9 to 202 ng/ml of A and 11.2 to 206 ng/ml of DHA in plasma). The mean recoveries over the entire concentration range were from 96 to 100% for A with C .V. from 6 to 13%, from 92% to 100% for DHA (α-tautomer) with C .V. from 4 to 16%. For A, the mean recovery was 96% at the limit of quantitation (LOQ) of 10.9 ng/ml with a CV of 13%. For DHA, the mean recovery was 100% at the LOQ of 11.2 ng/ml with a CV of 16%.  相似文献   

19.
The validation of a LC/MS/MS method for the determination of 8-methoxypsoralen (8-MOP) in human plasma and microdialysates after topical application is described. Plasma samples were extracted by liquid-liquid extraction with diisopropylether using 4,5',8-trimethylpsoralen (TMP) as internal standard. Chromatographic separation of plasma sample extracts was carried out using a short narrow-bore Nucleosil C18 column (30 mm x 2.0 mm i.d.) with acetonitrile/(2 mM ammonium acetate buffer, 2 mM acetic acid) (80:20, v/v). For mass spectrometric analysis an API 3000 triple quadrupole mass spectrometer was employed. The mass transitions used were m/z 217.2-->174.0 for 8-MOP and m/z 229.1-->142.1 for TMP. Microdialysis samples diluted with an equal amount of acetonitrile did not require any extraction and were analyzed directly on a narrow-bore Nucleosil C18 column (70 mm x 2.0mm i.d.) with acetonitrile/(2 mM ammonium acetate buffer, 2 mM acetic acid) (50:50, v/v) with the mass transition m/z 217.2-->174.0. The assays were validated over the concentration ranges of 0.5-50 ng/ml for plasma samples and 0.25-50 ng/ml for microdialysates, respectively.  相似文献   

20.
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