| Literature DB >> 36192810 |
Kimberly Brewer1, Jacob Machin2, George Maylin3, Clara Fenger4, Abelardo Morales-Briceño5, Thomas Tobin6.
Abstract
Gabapentin, 1-(Aminomethyl)cyclohexaneacetic acid, MW 171.240, is a frequently prescribed high dose human medication that is also used recreationally. Gabapentin is orally absorbed; the dose can be 3,000 mg/day and it is excreted essentially unchanged in urine. Gabapentin is stable in the environment and routinely detected in urban wastewater. Gabapentin randomly transfers from humans to racing horses and is at times detected at pharmacologically ineffective / trace level concentrations in equine plasma and urine. In Ohio racing between January 2019 and July 2020,18 Gabapentin identifications, all less than 2 ng/ml in plasma, were reported. These identifications were ongoing because the horsemen involved were unable to pin down and therefore avoid the source of these identifications. Given that 44 ng/ml or less is an Irrelevant Plasma Concentration (IPC) of Gabapentin in horses, we proposed a 5 ng/ml plasma interim Screening Limit of Detection for Gabapentin identifications in Ohio racing, and an essentially similar 8 ng/ml plasma Screening Limit of Detection was suggested by a scientific advisor to the Ohio Horse Racing Commission. As such, an analytical Screening Limit of 8 ng /ml in plasma is an appropriate and pharmacologically conservative analytical "cut-off" or Screening Limit of Detection (SLOD) for Gabapentin in equine competitive events to avoid the calling of "positive" identifications on random unavoidable trace level identifications of this widely prescribed human therapeutic medication in equine forensic samples.Entities:
Keywords: 8 ng/mL; Environmental presence; Gabapentin; Horses; Plasma concentration; Screening Limit of Detection
Year: 2022 PMID: 36192810 PMCID: PMC9531455 DOI: 10.1186/s13620-022-00226-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ir Vet J ISSN: 0368-0762 Impact factor: 2.359
Fig. 1This figure presents annual Gabapentin identifications as per Association of Racing Commissioners International Records, 2009–2020. The year 2019 saw 18 total cases, 8 in Ohio and another 10 called in Ohio but not all of these Ohio cases had been adjudicated by mid-2020
Fig. 2“Estimated” plasma concentrations in pg/ml of the Gabapentin “positives” reported in Ohio racing, January 1st, 2019, to July 30th, 2020, data courtesy of a Freedom of Information (FOI) request to the Ohio Department of Agriculture
Fig. 3Chemical structure of Gabapentin, 1-(aminomethyl)cyclohexaneacetic acid, C9H17NO2, molecular weight 171.24
Fig. 4Tukey Outlier Analysis based on the Ohio Department of Agriculture data showing the outlier fences to be 2,282.5 pg/ml (2.3nanograms/ml) for moderate outliers and 3,381.25 pg/ml (3.4 ng/ml) for extreme outliers