3.8 Article

High-temperature solid-phase microextraction procedure for the detection of drugs by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHROMATOGRAPHY B
Volume 745, Issue 2, Pages 399-411

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/S0378-4347(00)00312-1

Keywords

solid-phase microextraction; drugs

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High-temperature headspace solid-phase microextraction (SPME) with simultaneous (in situ) derivatisation (acetylation or silylation) is a new sample preparation technique for the screening of illicit drugs in urine and for the confirmation analysis in serum by GC-MS. After extraction of urine with a small portion of an organic solvent mixture (e.g., 2 ml of hexane-ethyl acetate) at pH 9, the organic layer is separated and evaporated to dryness in a small headspace vial. A SPME-fiber (e.g., polyacrylate) doped with acetic anhydride-pyridine (for acetylation) is exposed to the vapour phase for 10 min at 200 degrees C in a blockheater. The SPME fiber is then injected into the GC-MS for thermal desorption and analysis. After addition of perchloric acid and extraction with n-hexane to remove Lipids, the serum can be analysed after adjusting to pH 9 as described for urine. Very clean extracts are obtained. The various drugs investigated could be detected and identified in urine by the total ion current technique at the following concentrations: amphetamines (200 mu g/l), barbiturates (500 mu g/l), benzodiazepines (100 mu g/l), benzoylecgonine (150 mu g/l), methadone (100 mu g/l) and opiates (200 mu g/l). In serum all drugs could be detected by the selected ion monitoring technique within their therapeutic range. As compared to liquid-liquid extraction only small amounts of organic solvent are needed and larger amounts of the pertinent analytes could be transferred to the GC column. In contrast to solid-phase extraction (SPE), the SPME-fiber is reusable several times (as there is no contamination by endogenous compounds). The method is time-saving and can be mechanised by the use of a dedicated autosampler. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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