4.8 Article

Ultrasensitive Liquid Chromatography-Tandem Mass Spectrometric Methodologies for Quantification of Five HIV-1 Integrase Inhibitors in Plasma for a Microdose Clinical Trial

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 84, Issue 20, Pages 8614-8621

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ac301581h

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Funding

  1. Merck

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HIV-1 integrase strand transfer inhibitors are an important class of compounds targeted for the treatment of HIV-1 infection. Microdosing has emerged as an attractive tool to assist in drug candidate screening for clinical development, but necessitates extremely sensitive bioanalytical assays, typically in the pg/mL concentration range. Currently, accelerator mass spectrometry is the predominant tool for microdosing support, which requires a specialized facility and synthesis of radiolabeled compounds. There have been few studies attempted to comprehensively assess a liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) approach in the context of microdosing applications. Herein, we describe the development of automated LC-MS/MS methods to quantify five integrase inhibitors in plasma with the limits of quantification at 1 pg/mL for raltegravir and 2 pg/mL for four proprietary compounds. The assays involved double extractions followed by UPLC coupled with negative ion electrospray MS/MS analysis. All methods were fully validated to the rigor of regulated bioanalysis requirements, with intraday precision between 1.20 and 14.196 and accuracy between 93.8 and 107% at the standard curve concentration range. These methods were successfully applied to a human microdose study and demonstrated to be accurate, reproducible, and cost-effective. Results of the study indicate that raltegravir displayed linear pharrnacokinetics between a microdose and a pharmacologically active dose.

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