| Literature DB >> 28379393 |
Anna M Miller1, Melissa M Goggin1, An Nguyen1, Stephanie D Gozum1, Gregory C Janis1.
Abstract
A wide range of concentrations are frequently observed when measuring drugs of abuse in urine toxicology samples; this is especially true for amphetamine and methamphetamine. Routine liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry confirmatory methods commonly anchored at a 50 ng/mL lower limit of quantitation can span approximately a 100-fold concentration range before regions of non-linearity are reached deteriorating accurate quantitation and qualitative assessments. In our experience, approximately a quarter of amphetamine and methamphetamine positive samples are above a 5,000 ng/mL upper limit of quantitation and thus require reanalysis with dilution for accurate quantitative and acceptable qualitative results. We present here the development of an analytical method capable of accurately quantifying samples with concentrations spanning several orders of magnitude without the need for sample dilution and reanalysis. For each analyte the major isotopes were monitored for analysis through the lower concentration ranges (50-5,000 ng/mL), and the naturally occurring, low probability 13C2 isotopes were monitored for the analysis of the high concentration samples (5,000-100,000 ng/mL amphetamine and 5,000-200,000 ng/mL methamphetamine). The method simultaneously monitors transitions for the molecules containing only 12C and 13C2 isotopologues eliminating the need for re-extraction and reanalysis of high concentration samples.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28379393 DOI: 10.1093/jat/bkx028
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Anal Toxicol ISSN: 0146-4760 Impact factor: 3.367