Simultaneous determination of TPN729 and its five metabolites in human plasma and urine by liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry.

Journal: Journal of pharmaceutical and biomedical analysis
PMID:

Abstract

A specific and sensitive method was firstly developed using high performance liquid chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry (HPLC-MS/MS) to simultaneously quantify TPN729 and its metabolites (TPN729-D1, TPN729-D2, TPN729M15-3 and TPN729M3) in human plasma and (TPN729-D1, TPN729-D2, TPN729M15-3 and TPN729M14) in human urine. Protein precipitation and direct dilution were used to extract TPN729 and its metabolites from plasma and urine, respectively. Ionization of TPN729, TPN729-D1, TPN729-D2, TPN729M15-3, TPN729M3, TPN729M14 and sildenafil (internal standard, IS) was performed using an electrospray ionization (ESI) source in positive mode and detection was carried out with multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) mode. This assay method for TPN729 and its five metabolites has been fully validated in terms of sensitivity, linearity, lower limit of quantification (LLOQ), precision, accuracy, stability, matrix effect and recovery. The LLOQ of TPN729/TPN729-D1/TPN729-D2/TPN729M15-3/TPN729M3 in human plasma and TPN729/TPN729-D1/TPN729-D2/TPN729M15-3/TPN729M14 in human urine were 0.200/0.500/2.00/0.500/1.00 ng/mL and 4.00/2.50/10.0/2.50/1.00 ng/mL, respectively. Inter- and intra-batch precision of TPN729 and its metabolites were less than 15% and the accuracy was within ±15% for both plasma and urine. The extraction recoveries of all analytes at three concentration levels were consistent. In conclusion, the validation results showed that this method was robust, specific, and sensitive and it can successfully fulfill the requirement of clinical pharmacokinetic study of TPN729 in Chinese healthy subjects.

Authors

  • Yang Liu
    Department of Computer Science, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong, China.
  • Shuguang Shao
    Tianfang Pharma Inc., Beijing 100000, China.
  • Hanlin Song
    Clinical Pharmacology Research Center, Peking Union Medical College Hospital, Peking Union Medical College and Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Beijing 100032, China.
  • Xueting Yao
    Clinical Pharmacology Research Center, Peking Union Medical College Hospital, Peking Union Medical College and Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Beijing 100032, China.
  • Jie Liu
    School of Bioscience and Bioengineering, South China University of Technology, Guangzhou, China.
  • Hongzhong Liu
    Clinical Pharmacology Research Center, Peking Union Medical College Hospital, Peking Union Medical College and Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Beijing 100032, China.
  • Ling Song
    Clinical Pharmacology Research Center, Peking Union Medical College Hospital, Peking Union Medical College and Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Beijing 100032, China.
  • Ji Jiang
    Clinical Pharmacology Research Center, Peking Union Medical College Hospital, Peking Union Medical College and Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Beijing 100032, China.
  • Dongyang Liu
    Clinical Pharmacology Research Center, Peking Union Medical College Hospital, Peking Union Medical College and Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Beijing 100032, China. Electronic address: liudongyang@pumch.cn.
  • Pei Hu
    Clinical Pharmacology Research Center, Peking Union Medical College Hospital, Peking Union Medical College and Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Beijing 100032, China. Electronic address: hubei01_pumch@163.com.