Quantification of fenoprofen in human plasma using UHPLC-tandem mass spectrometry for pharmacokinetic study in healthy subjects.
Kirtikumar D BharwadPriyanka A ShahPranav S ShrivastavVinay S SharmaPuran SinghalPublished in: Biomedical chromatography : BMC (2019)
A rapid, simple and sensitive ultra-performance liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (UHPLC-MS/MS) method has been developed to quantify fenoprofen, a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug in human plasma for a pharmacokinetic study in healthy subjects. Owing to high levels of protein binding, protein precipitation followed by solid-phase extraction was employed for the extraction of fenoprofen and fenoprofen-d3 (used as internal standard) from 200 μL human plasma. Separation was performed on a BEH C18 (50 × 2.1 mm, 1.7 μm) column using methanol-0.2% acetic acid in water (75:25, v/v) under isocratic elution. Electrospray ionization was operated in the negative mode for sample ionization. Ion transitions used for quantification in the selected reaction monitoring mode were m/z 241/197 and m/z 244/200 for fenoprofen and fenoprofen-d3, respectively. Under the optimized conditions, fenoprofen showed excellent linearity in the concentration range 0.02-20 μg/mL (r2 ≥ 0.9996), adequate sensitivity, favorable accuracy (96.4-103.7%) and precision (percentage coefficient of variation ≤4.3) with negligible matrix effect. The validated method was successfully applied to a pharmacokinetic study of fenoprofen in healthy subjects. The significant features of the method include higher sensitivity, small plasma volume for processing and a short analysis time.
Keyphrases
- solid phase extraction
- liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry
- tandem mass spectrometry
- simultaneous determination
- ms ms
- liquid chromatography
- ultra high performance liquid chromatography
- high performance liquid chromatography
- gas chromatography
- molecularly imprinted
- gas chromatography mass spectrometry
- binding protein
- high resolution mass spectrometry
- mass spectrometry
- anti inflammatory
- magnetic resonance
- amino acid
- emergency department
- adverse drug
- magnetic resonance imaging
- electronic health record
- drug induced
- diffusion weighted imaging