Evaluating bioanalytical capabilities of paper spray ionization for abiraterone drug quantification in patient plasma.
Atul BhatnagarMatthew J McKayMalmaruha ArasaratnamMegan CrumbakerHoward GurneyMark P MolloyPublished in: Journal of mass spectrometry : JMS (2021)
Paper spray ionization (PSI) is a direct, fast, and low-cost ambient ionization technique which may have clinical utility for qualitative and quantitative analysis of therapeutic drugs and metabolites from patient specimens. We developed and validated a PSI-mass spectrometry (PSI-MS/MS) method according to the US-FDA guidelines for bioanalytical studies to measure the prostate cancer drug abiraterone directly from patient plasma. The established linearity range was 3.1-156.8 ng/mL with a precision (%CV) and an accuracy (%) range of 0.5-10.7 and 93.5-103.2, respectively. The mean internal standard normalized matrix factor for abiraterone was just below 1 with highest %CV of 10.2 at the low-level quality control. In benchmarking the performance of this assay against a published LC-MS/MS assay, we showed they were mostly equivalent, with the exception of accuracy with clinical samples. We found the quantitative values observed for abiraterone measured directly from patient plasma using PSI-MS/MS showed positive bias. Upon investigation, we concluded the increased values were due to summed quantitation of isomeric abiraterone conjugates and metabolites which are separable by LC-MS/MS, but not with the current PSI-MS/MS configuration. Despite demonstrating the utility of PSI-MS/MS for rapid bioanalysis, this study also highlighted a limitation encountered with the direct analysis of abiraterone in clinical samples.
Keyphrases
- ms ms
- prostate cancer
- case report
- liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry
- mass spectrometry
- low cost
- high resolution
- quality control
- gas chromatography
- high performance liquid chromatography
- systematic review
- high throughput
- emergency department
- ultra high performance liquid chromatography
- particulate matter
- radical prostatectomy
- randomized controlled trial
- drug induced
- adverse drug
- cancer therapy
- ultrasound guided
- clinical practice
- quantum dots
- electronic health record
- solid phase extraction
- case control