We describe a sensitive and specific method for the measurement of buprenorphine in human plasma. The method involves a structural analog as an internal calibrator, careful control of pH during sample extraction to maximize drug recovery, and back-extraction into acid followed by reextraction to eliminate endogenous interferences. After evaporation, sample residues are derivatized with heptafluorobutyric anhydride and analyzed by separation on a fused-silica polymethylsiloxane capillary column and electron-capture detection. Calibration curves were linear in the ranges 0.1–2.0 μg/L and 2.0–20 μg/L, with within-run CVs of 9.7% at 0.1 μg/L to 5.0% at 20 μg/L, and total CVs of 15.9% at 0.1 μg/L to 6.5% at 10 μg/L. The limit of quantification was 0.1 μg/L. The method was utilized in studies to determine the absolute bioavailability of sublingual doses of 2 mg of buprenorphine in 1 mL of 300 mL/L ethanol and the bioequivalence of sublingual 8-mg tablet and 300 mL/L ethanol solution formulations.
Recent studies have demonstrated the utility of quantitative assays for benzoylecgonine in assessing the efficacy of cocaine-dependence-treatment programs to determine if the amount of cocaine consumed has been reduced. We describe a simple gas chromatographic method for determining benzoylecgonine concentrations in urine. BZE is extracted from urine as an ion pair with tri-n-propylsulfonium ion. Injection into the heated injection port of the gas chromatograph results in thermal conversion of the ion pair to the n-propyl ester of BZE. Using the structural analogue of BZE, m-toluylecgonine, as the internal standard, the analysis is carried out on a (5% phenyl)methylpolysiloxane capillary column with nitrogen-phosphorus detection. There was a good correlation between BZE concentrations determined by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry and concentrations determined by the method described in this paper. Application to cocaine-dependence-treatment programs is discussed.
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