Abstract

Recently, liquid chromatography coupled to inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LC-ICP/MS) has been introduced to deal with some applications in the field of pharmaceutical, biomedical, and clinical analysis. In the case of drug research, the number of drugs and their metabolites containing detectable elements is quite limited. In this paper, LC-ICP/MS has been demonstrated to be suitable for the determination of S-containing drugs and their metabolites. In order to minimize the interference of polyatomic oxygen (m/z 32), the indirect detection of S, by means of the SO(+) ion (m/z 48), was optimized. For quantification purposes, it has been encountered that the percentage of organic solvent in the mobile phase strongly affects the sensitivity. Here, corrective strategies based on calibration curves established at different solvent concentrations (solvent-zone quantification) and post-column gradient compensation have been proposed to circumvent sensitivity variations. Results obtained have shown that suitable calibration models have been built for any compound regardless of the solvent percentage at which it is eluted from the chromatographic column. To prove the applicability of this methodology, the metabolism of ethacrynic acid and tiotropium bromide has been studied in vitro and in vivo. In the first case, ethacrynic acid does not contain S in its structure, however, the major route of metabolism for this compound consists of the formation of glutathione adduct and its further degradation. In the second case, tiotropium bromide contains two S atoms in its structure.

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