Abstract

Therapeutic drug monitoring is commonly used in both the ambulatory and hospital patient care settings. Routine measurement of concentrations of therapeutic agents in biological fluids is critical for certain drugs to maintain therapeutic benefit with minimizing drug-associated toxicities. Many analytical laboratory techniques are currently available to measure drug concentrations in biological samples. Recently there has been an increased interest in the use of capillary electrophoresis (CE) for measuring concentrations of therapeutic drugs in patient samples. However, while there are numerous reports of CE being used to measure drug concentrations in solution and pharmaceutical dosage forms, there are relatively few reports of the use of CE for measuring therapeutic agents in patient samples. The purpose of this paper is to provide an overview of methods currently used to measure therapeutic drugs in patient samples along with possible future trends for the use of CE in therapeutic drug monitoring.

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