Quantitation of free and total Amphotericin B in human biologic matrices by a liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometric method

Amphotericin B remains the standard of care for the treatment of invasive and disseminated fungal infections. Various lipid-based formulations of amphotericin B have been developed to improve its therapeutic index by decreasing toxicity. Previous bioanalytic methods using microbial inhibition or hig...

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Veröffentlicht in:Therapeutic drug monitoring 2001-06, Vol.23 (3), p.268-276
Hauptverfasser: LEE, Jean W, PETERSEN, Mary E, LIN, Patrick, DRESSLER, Dawna, BEKERSKY, Ihor
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Amphotericin B remains the standard of care for the treatment of invasive and disseminated fungal infections. Various lipid-based formulations of amphotericin B have been developed to improve its therapeutic index by decreasing toxicity. Previous bioanalytic methods using microbial inhibition or high-pressure liquid chromatography quantified total amphotericin B (free, plasma protein-bound, and lipid-complexed). Sensitivity of this method with a low limit of quantitation of 0.05 microg/mL was inadequate to determine free (unbound) amphotericin B. A sensitive LC/MS/MS method was developed to determine the total amphotericin B value in human plasma and other biologic matrices and the free amphotericin B concentration in plasma. For determination of total plasma amphotericin B concentrations, the sample was diluted and injected onto the LC/MS/MS. For total amphotericin B in other matrices and free amphotericin B in plasma, solid-phase extraction was used. Natamycin served as an internal standard. A PE Sciex API 3000 (Sciex; Concord, Ontario, Canada) was used to assess free amphotericin B in plasma ultrafiltrate determination and an API 3+ for the other matrices, with electrospray interfaced to a C18 analytic column. The low limit of quantitation was 1 ng/mL for ultrafiltrate. For total amphotericin B, the low limits were 2 microg/mL for plasma, 0.05 microg/mL for urine, and 0.4 microg/mL for fecal homogenate. The methods were validated to show the standard range linearity, sensitivity, selectivity, accuracy, precision, and stability of amphotericin B in the matrices tested.
ISSN:0163-4356
1536-3694
DOI:10.1097/00007691-200106000-00015