Abstract

An improved method for assaying paclitaxel in human plasma by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) with UV detection at 227 nm has been developed by adapting previously reported sample preparation methods and chromatographic conditions to facilitate semi-automated sample cleanup using a column switching technique. Manual sample manipulations were limited to isolating the drug and internal standard from plasma (1.0 ml) by liquid–liquid extraction using tert-butyl methyl ether. The sample extract was initially loaded onto a short cartridge column containing a cyanopropyl stationary phase. During the predetermined time interval that the drug and internal standard eluted from the cartridge, 1.50–2.20 min, a fully automated 6-position switching valve was used to direct the effluent onto an octylsilica analytical column. The same mobile phase, composed of acetonitrile–methanol–ammonium acetate buffer (pH 5.0; 20 mM) (76:19:105, v/v/v) and delivered at flow rate of 1.0 ml/min, was used for both separations. The overall retention times of paclitaxel and the internal standard were 10.9 and 18.1 min, respectively. The analytical method was thoroughly validated for quantitating paclitaxel in plasma at concentrations ranging from 6 to 586 nM (5–500 ng/ml). The lowest concentration of paclitaxel measured with acceptable day-to-day accuracy (100.2%) and precision (RSD 11.7%, n=21, 5 months) was 6 nM (5 ng/ml). The sensitivity and selectivity of the assay proved to be more than adequate for monitoring steady-state plasma concentrations of the drug when administered to cancer patients as a 96 h continuous intravenous infusion in combination with other anticancer agents, such as doxorubicin and topotecan. Moreover, the heart-cutting procedure prevented the problematic introduction of interfering nonpolar plasma components onto the analytical column, thereby enhancing sample throughput while decreasing the technical demands of the assay. The method was found to be extremely reproducible and robust during extended use for the routine analysis of plasma specimens acquired from several clinical trials.

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