Abstract

A reversed phase liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry method was developed and validated for quantification of cardamonin, a potential anticancer chalcone, in rat serum. Curcumin was used as an internal standard. Following liquid-liquid extraction using n-hexane and ethyl acetate (60:40, v/v), the processed samples were chromatographed on a C18 column using acetonitrile and ammonium acetate buffer (0.01 M, pH 4.5) (85:15, v/v) as mobile phase at a flow rate of 0.6 mL min(-1). Mass spectrometric detection was performed in the negative electrospray ionization mode by multiple reaction monitoring (m/z 269→122 and 367→217 for cardamonin and curcumin, respectively). The method was validated in terms of selectivity, accuracy, precision, sensitivity, reproducibility, dilution integrity and stability. The linearity was established in the range of 1-200 ng mL(-1) (r≥0.999). The recovery of cardamonin from spiked serum was always >90%. The intra- and inter-day precision (%RSD) and accuracy (%bias) were well within the acceptable limits. The method was applied for single oral and intravenous dose pharmacokinetics in male and female Sprague Dawley rats. Following oral dose, cardamonin showed peak serum concentration that occurred at ∼2 h with very low bioavailability in both male (0.6%) and female (4.8%) rats. Cardamonin exhibited a significant gender influence on pharmacokinetics and bioavailability in rats.

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