| Literature DB >> 32095473 |
Hyo-Bum Seo1, Seungil Cho2, Young-Ran Yoon2, Dong-Seok Yim1.
Abstract
This study describes the development of an analytical method to determine radotinib levels in human plasma using high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) coupled with triple quadrupole tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) for pharmacokinetic application. Plasma samples were sequentially processed by liquid-liquid extraction using methyl tert-butyl ether, evaporation, and reconstitution. Analytes were separated and analyzed using HPLC-MS/MS in selected reaction monitoring mode, monitoring the specific transitions of m/z 531 to 290 for radotinib and m/z 409 to 238 for amlodipine (internal standard). The HPLC-MS/MS analytical method was validated with respect to selectivity, linearity, sensitivity, accuracy, precision, recovery, and stability. Calibration curves were linear over a concentration range 5-3,000 ng/mL with correlation coefficients (r) > 0.998. The lower limit of quantification for radotinib in plasma was 5 ng/mL. The accuracy and precision of the analytical method were acceptable within 15% at all quality control levels. This method was suitable to determine radotinib levels in human plasma because of its simplicity, selectivity, precision, and accuracy.Entities:
Keywords: HPLC-MS/MS; Human plasma; Method validation; Pharmacokinetic study; Radotinib (IY5511)
Year: 2017 PMID: 32095473 PMCID: PMC7033409 DOI: 10.12793/tcp.2017.25.4.183
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Clin Pharmacol ISSN: 2289-0882
Figure 1Chemical structures of (a) radotinib (IY5511) and (b) amlodipine (IS) and collision-induced dissociation spectra of the corresponding protonated molecular ions, [M+H]+.
Figure 2Determination of void volume using imatinib as a marker.
Figure 3Typical SRM chromatograms of (a) a human blank plasma, (b) a human blank plasma spiked with IS (6 µg/mL), (c) a plasma spiked with radotinib (5 ng/mL) and IS (6 µg/mL), and (d) a plasma sample taken from a patient three hours after oral administration of a 400-mg radotinib and spiked with IS. The following transitions were monitored: m/z 531 → 290 for radotinib (left) and m/z 409 → 238 for IS (right).
Intra- and inter-day accuracy and precision of QC samples of radotinib in plasma
| QC concentration (ng/mL) | Intra-batch (n=5) | Inter-batch (n=25) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Accuracy (%) | CV (%) | Accuracy (%) | CV (%) | |
| 5 | 95.23 | 6.37 | 98.10 | 12.6 |
| 15 | 102.2 | 3.59 | 105.1 | 6.92 |
| 800 | 105.1 | 3.24 | 107.1 | 6.10 |
| 2400 | 97.55 | 2.47 | 104.0 | 6.19 |
Recovery of radotinib and IS from spiked human plasma
| QC control Level (ng/mL) | Recovery (%) | |
|---|---|---|
| Radotinib | IS | |
| 15 | 87.9 | 73.9 |
| 800 | 86.1 | 80.1 |
| 2400 | 83.0 | 75.2 |
| Mean recovery (%) | 85.6 | 76.4 |
| Precision (%) | 2.88 | 4.27 |
Stability of radotinib standard in human plasma under four different conditions (n=4)
| Storage conditions | Low QC (15 ng/mL) | High QC (2,400 ng/mL) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Accuracy (%) | CV (%) | Accuracy (%) | CV (%) | |
| Room temperature stability (20 h) | 94.80 | 8.20 | 107.6 | 6.36 |
| Freeze and thaw stability (3 cycles) | 108.1 | 5.18 | 104.8 | 10.8 |
| Processed sample stability (18 h, 4℃) | 96.33 | 6.68 | 100.5 | 6.50 |
| Long term temperature stability (378 days, −70℃) | 107.7 | 2.81 | 107.3 | 1.68 |
Figure 4Carryover effect: SRM chromatograms of (a) a radotinib calibration standard at the ULOQ (3 µg/mL) in human plasma and (b) a blank plasma sample right after the analysis of a ULOQ sample. The following transitions were monitored: m/z 531 → 290 for radotinib (left) and m/z 409 → 238 for IS (right).
Figure 5Representative plasma concentration-time prole of radotinib after administration of 400-mg radotinib two times a day.