Literature DB >> 32020178

Method Consolidation to Improve Scope and Efficiency in Postmortem Toxicology.

Jirair Gevorkyan1, Megan Wong1, Sue Pearring1, Luke N Rodda1,2.   

Abstract

Systematic toxicological approaches that employ both ideology changes and improvements in instrumentation and sample extraction allow for improved toxicology testing efficiency through lower sensitivities, higher specificity and minimized resource use. Historically, the San Francisco Office of the Chief Medical Examiner relied heavily on a gas chromatography mass spectrometry (GC-MS) testing regime, comprised of individual drug-class confirmation and quantitation assays. Traditional methods utilizing GC-MS typically require iterations of testing, exhausting sample volume, and hindering productivity and turnaround times, particularly for polypharmacy cases frequently seen in modern postmortem toxicology. The method described here consolidated the scope of seven legacy methods into a single liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) method for better sensitivity, higher throughput, minimal sample consumption for the quantitation of drugs of abuse and improved quality assurance with the incorporation of smart, automated processing. About 100 μL of blood or urine were rapidly extracted using a simple acetonitrile protein crash and subsequent in-vial filtration and injected on to an LC-MS-MS system. The developed method was fully validated to SWGTOX and international guidelines and incorporated 55 analytes along with a customized query that facilitates rapid and consistent application of acceptability criteria for data processing and review. Applicability was demonstrated with the analysis of 1,389 samples (858 blood and 531 urine) where at least 41% of positive results may have been missed due to their decreased sensitivity and 11% of results were not within the scope of the previous analytical methods estimated. On average, cases in this study would have previously required three distinct GC-MS assays, 3 mL of blood, and upwards of 30 h of active staff time. The described LC-MS-MS analytical approach has mitigated the need to perform multiple assays, utilized only 0.1 mL of sample, significantly reduced analyst work time, incorporated 10 additional analytes and allowed for a more comprehensive testing regime to better inform cause of death determinations.
© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.

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Year:  2020        PMID: 32020178     DOI: 10.1093/jat/bkaa003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Anal Toxicol        ISSN: 0146-4760            Impact factor:   3.367


  2 in total

1.  Drug Overdose Deaths Before and After Shelter-in-Place Orders During the COVID-19 Pandemic in San Francisco.

Authors:  Ayesha Appa; Luke N Rodda; Caroline Cawley; Barry Zevin; Phillip O Coffin; Monica Gandhi; Elizabeth Imbert
Journal:  JAMA Netw Open       Date:  2021-05-03

2.  Opioid Overdose-Related Emergency Department Visits and Accidental Deaths during the COVID-19 Pandemic.

Authors:  Luke N Rodda; Kelsa L West; Kathy T LeSaint
Journal:  J Urban Health       Date:  2020-09-28       Impact factor: 3.671

  2 in total

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