4.5 Article

Analysis of 39 drugs and metabolites, including 8 glucuronide conjugates, in an upstream wastewater network via HPLC-MS/MS

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jchromb.2021.122747

关键词

HPLC-MS; MS; Opioid; Metabolite; Glucuronide; Sewage; Wastewater-based; Epidemiology

资金

  1. National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health [R44DA051106]
  2. Massachusetts Consortium on Pathogen Readiness
  3. NIH [R44DA051106, K23DA044874]
  4. e-ink corporation
  5. Hans and Mavis Lopater Psychosocial Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This paper presents an HPLC-MS/MS method for quantifying glucuronide conjugates and other drug metabolites in wastewater systems. By shifting the sample collection point upstream, unambiguous markers of human exposure can be better captured, demonstrating the potential of expanding WBE to monitoring labile metabolites in upstream wastewater networks.
Pharmaceutical compounds ingested by humans are metabolized and excreted in urine and feces. These metabolites can be quantified in wastewater networks using wastewater-based epidemiology (WBE) methods. Standard WBE methods focus on samples collected at wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs). However, these methods do not capture more labile classes of metabolites such as glucuronide conjugates, products of the major phase II metabolic pathway for drug elimination. By shifting sample collection more upstream, these unambiguous markers of human exposure are captured before hydrolysis in the wastewater network. In this paper, we present an HPLC-MS/MS method that quantifies 8 glucuronide conjugates in addition to 31 parent and other metabolites of prescription and synthetic opioids, overdose treatment drugs, illicit drugs, and population markers. Calibration curves for all analytes are linear (r2 > 0.98), except THC (r2 = 0.97), and in the targeted range (0.1-1,000 ng mL-1) with lower limits of quantification (S/N = 9) ranging from 0.098 to 48.75 ng mL-1. This method is fast with an injection-to-injection time of 7.5 min. We demonstrate the application of the method to five wastewater samples collected from a manhole in a city in eastern Massachusetts. Collected wastewater samples were filtered and extracted via solid-phase extraction (SPE). The SPE cartridges are eluted and concentrated in the laboratory via nitrogen-drying. The method and case study presented here demonstrate the potential and application of expanding WBE to monitoring labile metabolites in upstream wastewater networks.

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