A bioanalytical method was developed and validated to estimate donepezil, 6-desmethyl donepezil and 5-desmethyl donepezil simultaneously in human plasma using galantamine as an internal standard (IS). The chromatographic separation was achieved on a reverse-phase XTerra RP (150 × 4.6 mm, 5 µm) column without affecting recovery (mean recovery > 60% with CV < 10%) for all analytes. ESI-MS/MS multiple reaction monitoring in positive polarity was used to detect mass pairs for donepezil (m/z 380.3 → 91.3), 6-desmethyl donepezil (m/z 366.4 → 91.3), 5-desmethyl donepezil (m/z 366.4 → 91.3) and galantamine m/z (288.1 → 213.0). The linearity was established over a dynamic range of 0.339-51.870, 0.100-15.380 and 0.103-15.763 ng/mL for donepezil, 6-desmethyl donepezil and 5-desmethyl donepezil, respectively. The current method shows that minimal conversion of labile metabolites to parent donepezil in plasma as stability was successfully achieved for 211 days at -15 °C storage temperature. The method was successfully applied to a clinical study after administration of 10 mg donepezil tablets to healthy male Indian volunteers.
A reliable, selective and sensitive liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry method was developed and validated for the quantification of lamotrigine in human plasma using lamotrigine-13C3, d3 as an internal standard. Analyte and internal standard were extracted from human plasma by solid-phase extraction and detected in positive ion mode by tandem mass spectrometry with electrospray ionization (ESI) interface. Chromatographic separation was performed on a Chromolith® SpeedROD; RP-18e column (50−4.6 mm i.d.) using acetonitrile: 5±0.1 mM ammonium formate solution (90:10, v/v) as the mobile phase at a flow rate of 0.500 mL/min. The calibration curves were linear over the range of 5.02–1226.47 ng/mL with the lower limit of quantitation validated at 5.02 ng/mL. The analytes were found stable in human plasma through three freeze (−20 °C)-thaw (ice-cold water bath) cycles and under storage on bench-top in ice-cold water bath for at least 6.8 h, and also in the mobile phase at 10 °C for at least 57 h. The method has shown good reproducibility, as the intra- and inter-day precisions were within 3.0%, while the accuracies were within ±6.0% of nominal values. The validated LC–MS/MS method was applied for the evaluation of pharmacokinetic and bioequivalence parameters of lamotrigine after an oral administration of 50 mg lamotrigine tablet to thirty-two healthy adult male volunteers.
A LC-MS/MS method for plasma topiramate analysis is delineated involving least number of healthy volunteers. Topiramate and amlodipine internal standard (IS) were extracted by simple centrifuge-coupled solid-phase extraction and reverse-phase chromatographic separation was performed on an Ascentis C(18) column. Turbo-spray negative-ion mode multiple-reaction monitoring was selected for mass pair detection at m/z 338.3 --> 78.0 and m/z 407.3 --> 295.5 for analyte and IS respectively. The method showed a dynamic linearity range from 10.4 to 2045.0 ng/mL, lower limit of quantitation achieved at 10.4 ng/mL and finally a mass spectrometric total run time of within 2.5 min for human sample analysis. Bioequivalence was assessed successfully using this fully validated method on 16 fasted Indian male subjects with 25 mg topiramate tablet administration. An appropriate study design describes plasma samples collection up to 216 h post dose in two periods, separated by a 28 day washout period. The challenge of half-life matching for test and reference drug was achieved with 73.43 +/- 9.68 and 73.06 +/- 14.03 h, respectively, and intra-subject coefficient of variation achieved within 11% for AUCs and C(max) evaluated by non-compartmental pharmacokinetic analysis. The results of LCMS topiramate complete method validation supported by pharmacokinetic study have not been published before, and are presented and discussed for the first time in this article.
LC- ESI- MS/MS simultaneous bioanalytical method was developed to determine acitretin and its metabolite isoacitretin in human plasma using acitretin-d3 used as the internal standard for both analytes. The compounds were extracted using protein precipitation coupled with liquid-liquid extraction with flash freezing technique. Negative mass transitions (m/z) of acitretin, isoacitretin and acitretin-d3 were detected in multiple reactions monitoring (MRM) mode at 325.4 → 266.3, 325.2 → 266.1 and 328.3 → 266.3, respectively, with a turbo ion spray interface. The chromatographic separation was achieved on an Ascentis-RP amide column (4.6 × 150 mm, 5 µm) with mobile phase delivered in isocratic mode. The method was validated over a concentration range of 1.025-753.217 ng/mL for acitretin and 0.394-289.234 ng/mL for isoacitretin with a limit of quantification of 1.025 and 0.394 ng/mL. The intra-day and inter-day precisions were below 8.1% for acitretin and below 13.8% for isoacitretin, while accuracy was within ±7.0 and ±10.6% respectively. For the first time, the best possible conditions for plasma stability of acitretin and isoacitretin are presented and discussed with application to clinical samples.
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