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Lipemia in the Plasma Sample Affects Fentanyl Measurements by Means of HPLC-MS(2) after Liquid-Liquid Extraction

Examination of fentanyl levels is frequently performed in certain scientific evaluations and forensic toxicology. It often involves the collection of very variable blood samples, including lipemic plasma or serum. To date, many works have reported the methods for fentanyl detection, but none of them...

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Autores principales: Tikhomirov, Marta, Śniegocki, Tomasz, Poźniak, Błażej
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8347684/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34361667
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules26154514
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author Tikhomirov, Marta
Śniegocki, Tomasz
Poźniak, Błażej
author_facet Tikhomirov, Marta
Śniegocki, Tomasz
Poźniak, Błażej
author_sort Tikhomirov, Marta
collection PubMed
description Examination of fentanyl levels is frequently performed in certain scientific evaluations and forensic toxicology. It often involves the collection of very variable blood samples, including lipemic plasma or serum. To date, many works have reported the methods for fentanyl detection, but none of them have provided information about the impact on the assay performance caused by an excessive amount of lipids. This aspect may be, however, very important for highly lipophilic drugs like fentanyl. To address this issue, we developed the liquid chromatography method with mass spectrometry detection and utilized it to investigate the impact of lipids presence in rabbit plasma on the analytical method performance and validation. The validation procedure, conducted for normal plasma and lipemic plasma separately, resulted in good selectivity, sensitivity and linearity. The limits of detection and quantification were comparable between the two matrices, being slightly lower in normal plasma (0.005 and 0.015 µg/L) than in lipemic plasma (0.008 and 0.020 µg/L). Liquid–liquid extraction provided a low matrix effect regardless of the lipid levels in the samples (<10%), but pronounced differences were found in the recovery and accuracy. In the normal plasma, this parameter was stable and high (around 100%), but in the lipemic matrix, much more variable and less efficient results were obtained. Nevertheless, this difference had no impact on repeatability and reproducibility. In the present work, we provided reliable, convenient and sensitive method for fentanyl detection in the normal and lipemic rabbit plasma. However, construction of two separate validation curves was necessary to provide adequate results since the liquid-liquid extraction was utilized. Therefore, special attention should be paid during fentanyl quantification that involves lipemic plasma samples purified by this technique.
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spelling pubmed-83476842021-08-08 Lipemia in the Plasma Sample Affects Fentanyl Measurements by Means of HPLC-MS(2) after Liquid-Liquid Extraction Tikhomirov, Marta Śniegocki, Tomasz Poźniak, Błażej Molecules Article Examination of fentanyl levels is frequently performed in certain scientific evaluations and forensic toxicology. It often involves the collection of very variable blood samples, including lipemic plasma or serum. To date, many works have reported the methods for fentanyl detection, but none of them have provided information about the impact on the assay performance caused by an excessive amount of lipids. This aspect may be, however, very important for highly lipophilic drugs like fentanyl. To address this issue, we developed the liquid chromatography method with mass spectrometry detection and utilized it to investigate the impact of lipids presence in rabbit plasma on the analytical method performance and validation. The validation procedure, conducted for normal plasma and lipemic plasma separately, resulted in good selectivity, sensitivity and linearity. The limits of detection and quantification were comparable between the two matrices, being slightly lower in normal plasma (0.005 and 0.015 µg/L) than in lipemic plasma (0.008 and 0.020 µg/L). Liquid–liquid extraction provided a low matrix effect regardless of the lipid levels in the samples (<10%), but pronounced differences were found in the recovery and accuracy. In the normal plasma, this parameter was stable and high (around 100%), but in the lipemic matrix, much more variable and less efficient results were obtained. Nevertheless, this difference had no impact on repeatability and reproducibility. In the present work, we provided reliable, convenient and sensitive method for fentanyl detection in the normal and lipemic rabbit plasma. However, construction of two separate validation curves was necessary to provide adequate results since the liquid-liquid extraction was utilized. Therefore, special attention should be paid during fentanyl quantification that involves lipemic plasma samples purified by this technique. MDPI 2021-07-27 /pmc/articles/PMC8347684/ /pubmed/34361667 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules26154514 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Tikhomirov, Marta
Śniegocki, Tomasz
Poźniak, Błażej
Lipemia in the Plasma Sample Affects Fentanyl Measurements by Means of HPLC-MS(2) after Liquid-Liquid Extraction
title Lipemia in the Plasma Sample Affects Fentanyl Measurements by Means of HPLC-MS(2) after Liquid-Liquid Extraction
title_full Lipemia in the Plasma Sample Affects Fentanyl Measurements by Means of HPLC-MS(2) after Liquid-Liquid Extraction
title_fullStr Lipemia in the Plasma Sample Affects Fentanyl Measurements by Means of HPLC-MS(2) after Liquid-Liquid Extraction
title_full_unstemmed Lipemia in the Plasma Sample Affects Fentanyl Measurements by Means of HPLC-MS(2) after Liquid-Liquid Extraction
title_short Lipemia in the Plasma Sample Affects Fentanyl Measurements by Means of HPLC-MS(2) after Liquid-Liquid Extraction
title_sort lipemia in the plasma sample affects fentanyl measurements by means of hplc-ms(2) after liquid-liquid extraction
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8347684/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34361667
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules26154514
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