A selective, rapid and simple liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) method is described for assay of donepezil in human plasma using escitalopram as an internal standard. Chromatographic separation was achieved on a Betabasic-C(8), 5 microm, 100 x 4.6 mm column using methanol:water:formic acid (90:9.97:0.03, v/v/v) as mobile phase. Detection of donepezil and internal standard was achieved by ESI MS/MS in positive ion mode using 380.20/91.10 and 325.13/262.00 transitions, respectively. The linearity over the concentration range of 0.15-50 ng/mL for donepezil was obtained and the lower limit of quantification was 0.15 ng/mL. For each level of quality control samples, inter-day and intra-day precisions (RSD) were < or =8.92 and 10.35% and accuracy (%RE) were < or =7.33% and 9.33%, respectively. The recovery was more than 88.50% for both donepezil and internal standard by solid-phase extraction, eliminating evaporation and reconstitution steps.
A high throughput liquid chromatography-electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry (LC-ESI-MS-MS) method is developed for the simultaneous estimation of clopidogrel (SR25990C) and its carboxylic acid metabolite (SR26334) in human plasma using glimepiride as internal standard. The extraction of SR25990C, its metabolite, and IS from the plasma (0.3 mL) involves treatment with phosphoric acid followed by solid-phase extraction (SPE). Sample preparation by this method yields clean extracts with quantitative and consistent mean recoveries of 98.05%, 85.45%, and 105.72% for SR25990C, SR26334, and IS, respectively. The SPE eluate without drying and reconstitution is analyzed by LC-MS-MS, operating in the positive ion and selective reaction monitoring mode. The injection volume is 2 microL with a total chromatographic run time of 5.0 min. The method response is linear over the dynamic range of 0.25 to 25.0 ng/mL for SR25990C and 50.0 to 6000.0 ng/mL for SR26334, with correlation coefficients of r > or = 0.9989 and 0.9984, respectively. The method is validated to demonstrate its specificity, linearity, accuracy, precision, recovery, matrix effect, dilution integrity, and stability studies. It is applied to study the bioavailability of 75 mg clopidogrel mesylate tablets in 16 human subjects with satisfactory results.
A rapid LC-MS/MS method has been developed and validated for the determination of losartan (LOS) and its metabolite losartan acid (LA) (EXP-3174) in human plasma using multiplexing technique (two HPLC units connected to one MS/MS). LOS and LA were extracted from human plasma by SPE technique using Oasis HLB cartridge without evaporation and reconstitution steps. Hydroflumethiazide (HFTZ) was used as an internal standard (IS). The analytes were separated on Zorbax SB C-18 column. The mass transition [M-H] ions used for detection were m/z 421.0 --> 127.0 for LOS, m/z 435.0 --> 157.0 for LA, and m/z 330.0 --> 239.0 for HFTZ. The proposed method was validated over the concentration range of 2.5-2000 ng/mL for LOS and 5.0-3000 ng/mL for LA with correlation coefficient > or = 0.9993. The overall recoveries for LOS, LA, and IS were 96.53, 99.86, and 94.16%, respectively. Total MS run time was 2.0 min/sample. The validated method has been successfully used to analyze human plasma samples for applications in 100 mg fasted and fed pharmacokinetic studies.
A rapid liquid chromatographic method with electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometric (LC-MS-MS) detection is developed and validated for quantification of glimepiride in heparinized human plasma. Plasma samples, without a drying and reconstitution step, are extracted by solid-phase extraction (SPE) and eluted with 0.9 mL of acetonitrile-methanol (1:1, v/v) containing 0.05% formic acid. The analyte and glimepiride d8 (internal standard, IS) are chromatographed on a C(18) column; the mobile phase is acetonitrile-2 mm ammonium formate (88:12, v/v), with the pH adjusted to 3.5 with formic acid, at a flow rate of 0.5 mL/min. The retention times of glimepiride and the IS are 0.93 min, and the runtime is 1.6 min per sample. Selected reaction monitoring of MH(+) at m/z 491.20 and 499.26 result in stable fragment ions with m/z 351.80 and 359.96 for glimepiride and the IS, respectively. The response was a linear function of the concentration in the range of 2.0-650.0 ng/mL, with r ≥ 0.9994. The recovery of glimepiride and the IS ranged from 81.91 to 83.36%. The assay has excellent characteristics and has been successfully used for the analysis of glimepiride in healthy human subjects in a bioequivalence study. It was well suited to clinical studies of the drug involving large numbers of samples.
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