| Literature DB >> 29805839 |
Raphael Hösli1,2, Stefan König3, Stefan F Mühlebach1.
Abstract
Phenytoin (PHT) is one of the most often used critical dose drugs, where insufficient or excessive dosing can have severe consequences such as seizures or toxicity. Thus, the monitoring and precise measuring of PHT concentrations in patients is crucial. This study develops and validates an LC-MS/MS method for the measurement of phenytoin concentrations in different body compartments (i.e., human brain dialysate, blood, and saliva) and compares it with a formerly developed GC-MS method that measures PHT in the same biological matrices. The two methods are evaluated and compared based on their analytical performance, appropriateness to analyze human biological samples, including corresponding extraction and cleanup procedures, and their validation according to ISO 17025/FDA Guidance for Industry. The LC-MS/MS method showed a higher performance compared with the GC-MS method. The LC-MS/MS was more sensitive, needed a smaller sample volume (25 µL) and less chemicals, was less time consuming (cleaning up, sample preparation, and analysis), and resulted in a better LOD (<1 ng/mL)/LOQ (10 ng/mL). The calibration curve of the LC-MS/MS method (10-2000 ng/mL) showed linearity over a larger range with correlation coefficients r2 > 0.995 for all tested matrices (blood, saliva, and dialysate). For larger sample numbers as in pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic studies and for bedside as well as routine analyses, the LC-MS/MS method offers significant advantages over the GC-MS method.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29805839 PMCID: PMC5901821 DOI: 10.1155/2018/8274131
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Anal Methods Chem ISSN: 2090-8873 Impact factor: 2.193
Figure 1Sample preparation for the LC-MS/MS analyses for blood, saliva, and aCSF samples.
Settings of the HPLC program.
| Time (minutes) | Pump 1 (main column (MC)) | Pumps 2 and 3 (trapping column (TC)) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| % | Flow ( | Comments | % | Flow ( | Flow pump 5 (H2O + 0.1% HCOOH) ( | Switching valve | |
| 0 | 35 | 500 | Start MS and pumps | 50 | 300 | 800 | TC → waste, MC → MS (loading) |
| 0.5 | 35 | Start gradient | 50 | 300 | 800 | TC → MC → MS (eluting) | |
| 0.6 | ↓ | 50 | 20 | 20 | |||
| 1 | 97.5 | ||||||
| 2 | 97.5 | TC → waste, MC → MS | |||||
| 2.5 | 35 | 50 | 300 | 800 | Reequilibration | ||
Figure 2LC-MS/MS settings.
Figure 3Chromatogram of phenytoin (illustrated for LOQ (10 ng/mL) and QC3 (400 ng/mL)) with PHT-D10 as IS (50 ng/mL).
Comparison of the GC-MS [8] versus LC-MS/MS method.
| Criterion | GC-MS | LC-MS/MS |
|---|---|---|
| Retention time | PHT 15.12 min, IS MPPH 16.15 min | PHT and PHT-D10 2.8 min |
| Selectivity/sensitivity (absence of PHT) | Good peak differentiation and quantification of PHT. All blank samples were negative (no presence of PHT) | All blank samples were negative (no presence of PHT) |
| Recovery | 94.1% for QC2 (100 ng/mL) | 89.5% for QC1 (10 ng/mL) |
| 94.3% for QC5 (1000 ng/mL) | 97.1% for QC3 (1600 ng/mL) | |
| LOD (calculated as | 15 ng/mL | <1 ng/mL |
| LOQ (calculated as 5 times the response/blank) | 50 ng/mL | 10 ng/mL |
| Accuracy | The calibrator values showed min–max percent deviations of 1–20% for Cal 1 (50 ng/mL) to Cal 6 (1200 ng/mL) | The calibrator values showed min–max percent deviations of 1–8% for Cal 1 (10 ng/mL) to Cal 8 (2000 ng/mL) |
| Regression coefficient, |
|
|
| Calibration range | 50–1200 ng/mL | 10–2000 ng/mL |
| Run time per analysis | 30 min | 7 min |
| Injection volume of the sample | 2.0 | 10 |
| Sample preparation time | 5 h for 25 samples | 6 h for 182 samples |
| Stability of the processed samples | Dried extracts were stable for ≥4 weeks (min/max deviation 4%). No effect by reinjection and storage (33 h) on the autosampler | Reinjection after 7 days showed no difference in accuracy |
| Sample volume needed | 50 | 25 |
Figure 4Sample preparation for the GC-MS analyses [8].