| Literature DB >> 30987254 |
Hyeon Kim1, Young Seok Ji2, Shaheed Ur Rehman3, Min Sun Choi4, Myung Chan Gye5, Hye Hyun Yoo6.
Abstract
Acetyl triethyl citrate (ATEC) is a water-soluble plasticizer used in pharmaceutical plasticized polymers. In this study, the pharmacokinetics and metabolism of ATEC were investigated using liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) in rats. Plasma protein precipitation with methanol was used for sample preparation. For chromatographic separation, a C18 column was used. The mobile phases consisted of 0.1% formic acid and 90% acetonitrile, and gradient elution was used. The following precursor-product ion pairs were selected for reaction monitoring analysis: 319.1 m/z → 157 m/z for ATEC and 361.2 m/z → 185.1 m/z for tributyl citrate (internal standard) in positive ion mode. The LC-MS/MS method was fully validated and successfully applied to a pharmacokinetic study of ATEC in rats. The pharmacokinetic study showed that the volume of distribution and mean residence time of ATEC were higher after oral administration than after intravenous administration, pointing to extensive first-pass metabolism and distribution in tissue. In addition, the plasma concentration profile of the postulated metabolites of ATEC was investigated in plasma, urine, and feces. The resulting data indicated that ATEC was extensively metabolized and excreted mainly as metabolites rather than as the parent form. The developed analytical method and the data on the pharmacokinetics and metabolism of ATEC may be useful for understanding the safety and toxicity of ATEC.Entities:
Keywords: acetyl triethyl citrate; metabolism; pharmaceutical polymers; pharmacokinetics; plasticizer
Year: 2019 PMID: 30987254 PMCID: PMC6523079 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics11040162
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.321
Figure 1Product ion spectrum of (A) Acetyl triethyl citrate (ATEC) and (B) tributyl citrate internal standard (TBC IS).
Figure 2Typical MRM chromatograms of ATEC (top) and TBC (IS; bottom), (A) blank rat plasma, (B) blank rat plasma spiked with ATEC (10 ng/mL) and IS (100 ng/mL); rat plasma samples taken (C) 2 min after i.v. and (D) 15 min after p.o. administration of ATEC.
Intra- and inter-day accuracy and precision for the determination of ATEC in rat plasma. QC, Quality Control, CV, LLOQ, lower limit of quantification.
| QC level | Nominal (ng/mL) | Intra-day ( | Inter-run ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Accuracy (%) | CV (%) | Accuracy (%) | CV (%) | ||
| LLOQ | 10 | 101.5 | 8.0 | 98.2 | 6.9 |
| Low | 30 | 102.9 | 6.8 | 98.2 | 3.3 |
| Mid | 300 | 100.7 | 4.5 | 99.8 | 2.6 |
| High | 1600 | 89.1 | 3.0 | 94.0 | 7.4 |
Stability of ATEC in rat plasma.
| Stability Test | % Recovery | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 50 ng/mL | 1600 ng/mL | ||
| Short-term | (RT a for 8 h) | 96.3 ± 3.6 | 97.9 ± 7.0 |
| Long-term | (−20 °C for 21 day) | 90.8 ± 6.1 | 97.3 ± 7.5 |
| Freeze–thaw | (−20 °C, 3 cycles) | 105.8 ± 8.7 | 111.6 ± 4.9 |
| Post-preparative | (4 °C for 12 h) | 95.1 ± 4.6 | 91.0 ± 4.3 |
a, room temperature.
Figure 3Mean plasma concentration–time profile of ATEC (A) after intravenous (i.v.) administration of 10 mg/kg of ATEC to rats (n = 6) and (B) after oral (p.o.) administration of 500 mg/kg (n = 6). Data are expressed as mean ± SD. The initial concentrations in the i.v. administration were estimated and indicated.
Pharmacokinetic parameters after i.v. and p.o. administration of ATBC to rats.
| Parameter | IV (10 mg/kg, | PO (500 mg/kg, | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| GM | 95% CI | GM | 95% CI | |
| AUC (ng·h/mL) | 78.1 | 64.5–95.7 | 529.6 | 379.4–893.9 |
| - | - | 0.5 | 0.25–0.5 | |
| 1219.6 | 1049.6–1427.6 | 444.5 | 271.8–834.3 | |
| 0.03 | 0.02–0.03 | 1.03 | 0.75–1.46 | |
| Vz (L/kg) | 4.6 | 3.7–5.8 | 215.6 b | 8.1–733.2 |
| Cl (L/h/kg) | 125.1 | 105.0–150.6 | 145.5 c | 47.6–333.1 |
| MRT (h) | 0.03 | 0.03–0.04 | 6.56 | 3.58–12.63 |
GM: geometric mean; CI: confidence interval; AUC: area under the curve for concentrations; Tmax: time for peak concentration; Cmax: peak concentration; T1/2: elimination half-life; Cl: clearance; Vz: volume of distribution; MRT: mean residence time; F: bioavailability. a represented as a median value with range. b Vz/F; c Cl/F
Figure 4Metabolic stability of ATEC in (A) phosphate-buffered saline (pH 7.4), (B) rat plasma, and (C) rat liver microsomes.
Figure 5(A) Proposed metabolic pathway of ATEC and representative LC–MS chromatograms of (B) plasma, (C) urine, and (D) feces from rats that were orally administered ATEC.
Accurate mass data for ATEC and its metabolites.
| Name | RT | Proposed Elemental Composition [M+H]+ | Exact Mass | Measured Mass | Error (ppm) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ATEC | 17.4 | C14H22O8 | 319.1387 | 319.1388 | −0.3 |
| Acetyl diethyl citrate | 11.5 | C12H18O8 | 291.1074 | 291.1075 | −0.3 |
| Diethyl citrate | 7.7 | C10H17O7 | 250.1047 | 250.1057 | −4.0 |
| Monoethyl citrate | 3.4 | C8H12O7 | 221.0656 | 221.0655 | 0.5 |
Figure 6Plot of time–peak area for ATEC and its metabolites in (A) plasma, (B) urine, and (C) feces from the rats orally administered ATEC.