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Open Access 01-04-2024 | Amitriptyline | Original Article

Development of an LC–MS/MS method for the determination of five psychoactive drugs in postmortem urine by optimization of enzymatic hydrolysis of glucuronide conjugates

Authors: Tomohito Matsuo, Tadashi Ogawa, Masae Iwai, Katsutoshi Kubo, Fumio Kondo, Hiroshi Seno

Published in: Forensic Toxicology

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Abstract

Purpose

Toxicological analyses of biological samples play important roles in forensic and clinical investigations. Ingested drugs are excreted in urine as conjugates with endogenous substances such as glucuronic acid; hydrolyzing these conjugates improves the determination of target drugs by liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (LC–MS/MS). In this study, we sought to improve the enzymatic hydrolysis of glucuronide conjugates of five psychoactive drugs (11-nor-9-carboxy-Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol, oxazepam, lorazepam, temazepam, and amitriptyline).

Methods

The efficiency of enzymatic hydrolysis of glucuronide conjugates in urine was optimized by varying temperature, enzyme volume, and reaction time. The hydrolysis was performed directly on extraction columns. This analysis method using LC–MS/MS was applied to forensic autopsy samples after thorough validation.

Results

We found that the recombinant β-glucuronidase B-One® quantitatively hydrolyzed these conjugates within 3 min at room temperature directly on extraction columns. This on-column method saved time and eliminated the loss of valuable samples during transfer to the extraction column. LC–MS/MS-based calibration curves processed with this method showed good linearity, with r2 values exceeding 0.998. The intra- and inter-day accuracies and precisions of the method were 93.0–109.7% and 0.8–8.8%, respectively. The recovery efficiencies were in the range of 56.1–104.5%. Matrix effects were between 78.9 and 126.9%.

Conclusions

We have established an LC–MS/MS method for five psychoactive drugs in urine after enzymatic hydrolysis of glucuronide conjugates directly on extraction columns. The method was successfully applied to forensic autopsy samples. The established method will have broad applications, including forensic and clinical toxicological investigations.
Literature
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Metadata
Title
Development of an LC–MS/MS method for the determination of five psychoactive drugs in postmortem urine by optimization of enzymatic hydrolysis of glucuronide conjugates
Authors
Tomohito Matsuo
Tadashi Ogawa
Masae Iwai
Katsutoshi Kubo
Fumio Kondo
Hiroshi Seno
Publication date
01-04-2024
Publisher
Springer Nature Singapore
Published in
Forensic Toxicology
Print ISSN: 1860-8965
Electronic ISSN: 1860-8973
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11419-024-00685-1