4.5 Article

Application of chemometrics in understanding the spatial distribution of human pharmaceuticals in surface water

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING AND ASSESSMENT
Volume 184, Issue 11, Pages 6735-6748

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10661-011-2454-3

Keywords

Human pharmaceuticals; Aquatic pollution; Chemometrics; Langat River; Malaysia

Funding

  1. Malaysia's Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation (MOSTI) under the Science Fund [5450100]

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The growing interest in the environmental occurrence of veterinary and human pharmaceuticals is essentially due to their possible health implications to humans and ecosystem. This study assesses the occurrence of human pharmaceuticals in a Malaysian tropical aquatic environment taking a chemometric approach using cluster analysis, discriminant analysis and principal component analysis. Water samples were collected from seven sampling stations along the heavily populated Langat River basin on the west coast of peninsular Malaysia and its main tributaries. Water samples were extracted using solid-phase extraction and analyzed using liquid chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) for 18 pharmaceuticals and one metabolite, which cover a range of six therapeutic classes widely consumed in Malaysia. Cluster analysis was applied to group both pharmaceutical pollutants and sampling stations. Cluster analysis successfully clustered sampling stations and pollutants into three major clusters. Discriminant analysis was applied to identify those pollutants which had a significant impact in the definition of clusters. Finally, principal component analysis using a three-component model determined the constitution and data variance explained by each of the three main principal components.

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