Abstract

Interest is increasing in the use of different liquid chromatography techniques coupled online to mass spectrometry for the quantification of platinum anticancer drugs in human plasma to inform cancer chemotherapy. We developed, validated and studied the application of a method for quantification of intact oxaliplatin in human plasma using ultra high performance liquid chromatography hyphenated to inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (UHPLC-ICP-MS). Plasma samples were processed instantly after collection from patients to preserve oxaliplatin speciation by methanol-deproteinization, and storage of diluted supernatants (plasma:methanol 1:2 v/v) at −80 °C. UHPLC separation of intact oxaliplatin and internal standard (carboplatin) was achieved using a C18 column and linear gradient mobile phase (Mobile phase A: water-methanol (97:3 v/v), 0.075 mM sodium dodecyl sulfate, 9.79 nM thallium adjusted to pH 2.5 with trifluoromethanesulfonic acid; Mobile phase B: 100 % methanol (v/v)) with ICP-MS detection to monitor platinum and thallium at m/z 195 and 205, respectively. The limit of quantification was 50 nM in methanol-deproteinized diluted plasma (1:2 v/v). Linearity was established for calibration standards ranging from 50 to 500 nM made in methanol-deproteinized diluted plasma (1:2 v/v), and for dilution of higher concentration samples in blank matrix containing internal standard (final dilution 1:29 v/v). Intra-day and inter-day accuracy ranged from 96.8 to 103 % of nominal concentration and precision from 0.62 to 2.49 % coefficient of variation. Recovery was complete and a matrix effect confirmed the requirement for matrix-matched standards. Intact oxaliplatin was stable during storage for at least 473 days, and during analysis, in methanol-deproteinized diluted plasma (1:2 v/v). The method was applied to determining the plasma concentrations of intact oxaliplatin in patients undergoing cancer chemotherapy, and studies of oxaliplatin degradation in vitro. This improved method based on UHPLC-ICP-MS will allow more specific, efficient and reliable quantification of intact oxaliplatin in human plasma.

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