OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to develop a specific, sensitive, accurate and reproducible high-performance liquid chromatographic (HPLC) method to measure polymyxin B in human plasma. METHODS: Derivatization of polymyxin B with fluorescent 9-fluorenylmethyl chloroformate (FMOC-Cl) was performed in the same solid-phase extraction C18 cartridge used for the sample pre-treatment. Reversed-phase HPLC was employed with fluorometric detection. The summed peak areas of polymyxin B1 and B2 derivatives were used for quantification. Stability of polymyxin B FMOC derivatives was examined at room temperature for 6 days. Specificity was investigated against seven potentially co-administered antibiotics. Accuracy and reproducibility of the HPLC assay were determined by inter- and intra-day validation. RESULTS: The derivatives of polymyxin B2 and B1 were well resolved and had retention times of 4.75 and 5.55 min, respectively. Good linearity (r(2) > 0.99) was obtained between 0.125 and 4.00 mg/L polymyxin B in human plasma with good accuracy and reproducibility at the limit of quantification (0.125 mg/L). Intra- and inter-day validation demonstrated good accuracy and reproducibility for quality control samples with nominal concentrations of 0.30 and 3.00 mg/L. FMOC derivatives of polymyxin B were stable for at least 3 days at room temperature. None of the possibly co-administered antibiotics tested interfered with the chromatographic analysis of the polymyxin B FMOC derivatives. CONCLUSIONS: A rapid, specific, sensitive, accurate and reproducible HPLC method has been developed and validated to measure polymyxin B in human plasma. The method is suitable for clinical pharmacokinetic studies.
OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to develop a specific, sensitive, accurate and reproducible high-performance liquid chromatographic (HPLC) method to measure polymyxin B in human plasma. METHODS: Derivatization of polymyxin B with fluorescent 9-fluorenylmethyl chloroformate (FMOC-Cl) was performed in the same solid-phase extraction C18 cartridge used for the sample pre-treatment. Reversed-phase HPLC was employed with fluorometric detection. The summed peak areas of polymyxin B1 and B2 derivatives were used for quantification. Stability of polymyxin B FMOC derivatives was examined at room temperature for 6 days. Specificity was investigated against seven potentially co-administered antibiotics. Accuracy and reproducibility of the HPLC assay were determined by inter- and intra-day validation. RESULTS: The derivatives of polymyxin B2 and B1 were well resolved and had retention times of 4.75 and 5.55 min, respectively. Good linearity (r(2) > 0.99) was obtained between 0.125 and 4.00 mg/L polymyxin B in human plasma with good accuracy and reproducibility at the limit of quantification (0.125 mg/L). Intra- and inter-day validation demonstrated good accuracy and reproducibility for quality control samples with nominal concentrations of 0.30 and 3.00 mg/L. FMOC derivatives of polymyxin B were stable for at least 3 days at room temperature. None of the possibly co-administered antibiotics tested interfered with the chromatographic analysis of the polymyxin B FMOC derivatives. CONCLUSIONS: A rapid, specific, sensitive, accurate and reproducible HPLC method has been developed and validated to measure polymyxin B in human plasma. The method is suitable for clinical pharmacokinetic studies.
Authors: Hui He; Ji-Chang Li; Roger L Nation; Jovan Jacob; Gong Chen; Hee Ji Lee; Brian T Tsuji; Philip E Thompson; Kade Roberts; Tony Velkov; Jian Li Journal: J Antimicrob Chemother Date: 2013-06-07 Impact factor: 5.790
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