Abstract

When measuring fentanyl and midazolam simultaneously in the same plasma sample with standard high-performance liquid chromatography–ultraviolet (HPLC–UV) detection, overlap of the fentanyl peak by the midazolam peak occurs, which makes fentanyl determination impossible. We tested the hypothesis that by acidifying the methanol mobile phase with 0.02% perchloric acid, 70%, it would be possible to separate both peaks. The UV detector was set at 200 nm. Calibration curves for fentanyl (range 0–2000 pg/ml) and midazolam (range 0–400 ng/ml) were linear ( r>0.99). The detection limits were 200 pg/ml (fentanyl) and 10 ng/ml (midazolam). Precision and accuracy for intra- and inter-assay variability as well as in-line validation with quality control samples (QCS) were acceptable (< 15 and 20%, respectively), except for fentanyl QCS of 200 pg/ml (17.8% precision). Although less sensitive than gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC–MS), reliable measurements of fentanyl, simultaneously with midazolam, can be performed with this HPLC–UV system.

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