| Literature DB >> 35888790 |
Felicitas Wagener1, Luisa Euler1, Christian Görgens1, Sven Guddat1, Mario Thevis1,2.
Abstract
RAD140 is a selective androgen receptor modulator which has been abused in sporting competitions. Its use is prohibited by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) for athletes at all times. In addition to its illicit use, adverse analytical findings of RAD140 in doping control samples might result from other scenarios, e.g., the ingestion of contaminated dietary supplements. The differentiation between samples resulting from such contamination scenarios and intentional doping presents a considerable challenge, as little is known about the metabolism and elimination behavior of RAD140 in humans. In this study, six micro-dose excretion studies with five adult male volunteers each were conducted, and urine samples were analyzed by means of LC-HRMS/MS. Multiple metabolites, firstly detected in human urine, are described in this study. The sample preparation included an enzymatic hydrolysis step, which facilitated the estimation of RAD140 concentrations in urine. The elimination profiles and detection times for six metabolites as well as the intact drug are presented. The method was extensively characterized and deemed fit-for-purpose. The metabolite ratios were investigated for their predictive power in estimating the dose of RAD140 intake. The presented data will aid in better case result management in future doping cases involving RAD140.Entities:
Keywords: RAD140; doping; elimination profile; metabolism; selective androgen receptor modulators (SARMs)
Year: 2022 PMID: 35888790 PMCID: PMC9325264 DOI: 10.3390/metabo12070666
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Metabolites ISSN: 2218-1989
Figure 1Chemical structure of RAD140 [6].
List of discovered metabolites of RAD140 in human urine by means of LC-HRMS/MS.
| Analyte | Transformation | Molecular | RT [min] | Polarity | Precursor Ions | Product Ions | NCE [%] | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RAD140 | - | C18H11ClN5O− | 6.84 | − | 348.0658 | 321.0549 | 20 | [ |
| C20H17ClN5O2+ | + | 394.1065 | 223.0633 | 30 | [ | |||
| M1 | hydrolysis | C8H6ClN2O4S− | 3.54 | − | 260.9742 | 181.0174 | 25 | [ |
| M2a | glucuronidation | C26H23ClN5O9− | 4.59 | − | 584.1190 | 193.0354 | 30 | |
| M2b | glucuronidation | 4.79 | − | 193.0354 | 30 | |||
| M3 | hydrolysis | C8H6ClN2O− | 4.98 | − | 181.0174 | 145.0407 | 50 | [ |
| M4 | glucuronidation | C26H23ClN5O8− | 5.42 | − | 568.1241 | 193.0354 | 30 | [ |
| M5 | hydrolysis | C8H8ClN2+ | 5.49 | + | 167.0371 | 167.0371 | 50 | [ |
| M6a | hydroxylation | C18H11ClN5O2− | 5.76 | − | 364.0607 | 170.0360 | 30 | [ |
| M6b | hydroxylation | 5.91 | − | 170.0360 | 30 | [ | ||
| M6c | hydroxylation | 6.59 | − | 180.0096 | 30 | [ | ||
| M7 | sulfation | C20H15ClN5O5S− | 6.25 | − | 472.0488 | 348.0658 | 30 | |
| S-24 | (ISTD 2) | C18H13O3N2F4− | 7.45 | − | 381.0868 | 241.0594 | 30 | [ |
1 Only two hydroxy metabolites were reported by Sobolevsky et al. 2 Internal standard.
Figure 2Extracted ion chromatograms of the detected analytes in a urine sample collected 14.5 h after intake of a single dose of 50 μg of RAD140. The sample was prepared via hydrolysis and LLE.
Figure 3Proposed metabolic pathway of the detected metabolites of RAD140 in humans.
Method characterization results of the LC-HRMS/MS method for the detection of RAD140.
| Intra-day imprecision | 15.0% | at 2 ng/mL | |
| Intra-day imprecision | 12.8% | at 1 ng/mL | |
| Intra-day imprecision | 20.0% | at 0.2 ng/mL | |
| Inter-day imprecision | 18.5% | at 2 ng/mL | |
| Inter-day imprecision | 14.9% | at 1 ng/mL | |
| Inter-day imprecision | 23.4% | at 0.2 ng/mL | |
| LOD | 9 | pg/mL | |
| Selectivity | yes | ||
| LOI | 120 | pg/mL | |
| Recovery | 20.6–70.2% | at 1 ng/mL | |
| Matrix effects | 94.2–122.1% | at 1 ng/mL | |
| Extract stability (7 days, 4 °C) | 55.9–93.4% | at 1 ng/mL | |
| Carryover | 0.0% | at 8 ng/mL | |
| Robustness | 12.4% | ||
| STDev retention times | 0.05% | ||
| Linearity (R2) | 0.9918–0.9990 |
Figure 4Elimination profile of RAD140 (a) after the intake of a single dose of 50 μg of RAD140 (b) after the intake of five doses of 50 μg of RAD140 over 5 days. The black line indicates the average values of the five volunteers; minimum and maximum values are shown as error bars.
Detection times of metabolites after micro-dose application of RAD140. The range is between the first sample and the last sample in which the analyte was detectable in any of the volunteers (n = 5).
| Analyte | 1·1 μg | 5·1 μg 1 | 1·10 μg | 5·10 μg 1 | 1·50 μg | 5·50 μg 1 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RAD140 | 2–212 h | 0 2–240 h | 2–240 h | 0 2–501 h | 2–696 h | 0 2–912 h |
| M1 | - | - | 28 h 3 | 0 2–118 h | 2–120 h | 0 2–168 h |
| M3 | - | 2–72 h | 2–118 h | 0 2–185 h | 2–333 h | 0 2–503 h |
| M5 | - | - | - | 0 2–45 h | 2–597 h | 0 2–190 h |
| M6a | - | - | 35–72 h | 0 2–162 h | 4–288 h | 0 2–406 h |
| M6b | 10–32 h | 0 2–96 h | 2–223 h | 0 2–282 h | 2–504 h | 0 2–646 h |
| M6c | - | - | 4–30 h | 0 2–115 h | 2–261 h | 0 2–406 h |
1 Values are calculated from the last ingestion of RAD140. 2 Analyte is detectable in sample before last ingestion due to multi-dose application. 3 Analyte was detected in a single sample.
Figure 5Metabolite ratios M6b/M6c of single application of RAD140 (orange) and multi-dose application of RAD140 (blue). Arrows indicate the intake of 50 μg of RAD140.
Tentative “threshold ratios” of different metabolite combinations. All measured abundance ratios of the 50 μg application studies were included (n = 5 + 5).
| Presumed Time Point of Drug Intake | M6b/ | M6a/ | M6a/ | M6b/ | M6a/ | M6a/ | M6b/ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| <48 h | <12 | <0.8 | <0.05 | <2.5 | - | - | <0.15 |
| <72 h | - | - | - | - | <0.2 | <0.03 | - |
| >96 h | >50 | >8 | - | - | - | - | - |