Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1221895 | Journal of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Analysis | 2013 | 12 Pages |
•First method able to simultaneously quantify 15 antiretrovirals and boceprevir.•The method quantify elvitegravir, raltegravir, maraviroc, etravirine, tenofovir, boceprevir and 10 other antiretrovirals.•The assay uses a new UPLC-MS/MS technology.•Regarding sample preparation, the assay is very fast and cheap.•The method fulfills all criteria for therapeutic drug monitoring of antiretrovirals and boceprevir.
Therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) of antiretrovirals requires accurate and precise analysis of plasma drug concentrations. This work describes a simple, fast and sensitive UPLC-MS/MS method for determination of the commonly used protease inhibitors such as amprenavir, atazanavir, darunavir, indinavir, lopinavir, ritonavir, saquinavir and tipranavir, tenofovir a nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NRTI), the non-NRTI such as efavirenz, nevirapine, etravirine, the CCR5 antagonist maraviroc as well as the more recent antiretrovirals, the integrase inhibitors such as raltegravir, elvitegravir and the new direct acting anti-HCV boceprevir. Adapted deuterated internal standard was added to plasma aliquots (100 μl) prior to protein precipitation with methanol and acetonitrile. This method employed ultra-performance liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry with electrospray ionization mode. All compounds eluted within 4.2-min run time. Calibration curves were validated, with correlation coefficients (r2) higher than 0.997, for analysis of therapeutic concentrations reported in the literature. Inter- and intra-assay variations were <15%. Evaluation of accuracy shows a deviation <15% from target concentration at each quality control level. No significant matrix effect was observed for any of the antiretroviral studied. This new validated method fulfills all criteria for TDM of 15 antiretrovirals and boceprevir drugs and was successfully applied in routine TDM of antiretrovirals.
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