A Quantitative UPLC-MS/MS Research Method for the Measurement of Acetaminophen and 5 Metabolites in Plasma
Applications | 2017 | WatersInstrumentation
Acetaminophen is one of the most commonly used analgesics and antipyretics worldwide. Monitoring its plasma concentrations and those of its phase II and detoxification metabolites is critical for understanding drug disposition, safety, and potential toxicity in both clinical and preclinical settings.
This application note presents a sensitive and validated UPLC-MS/MS research method for the simultaneous quantification of acetaminophen and five key metabolites (sulfate, glucuronide, glutathione, cysteine, and N-acetyl cysteine conjugates) in human and rodent plasma.
Sample preparation is based on protein precipitation with methanol and incorporation of stable-isotope internal standards. Calibration standards and QC samples cover: acetaminophen (16–500 ng/mL), acetaminophen glucuronide and sulfate (3.2–100 ng/mL), and glutathione-derived and cysteine/NAC metabolites (0.64–20 ng/mL). Chromatographic separation uses a reversed-phase gradient on a C18 column at 40 °C with a 7.5 min runtime. The method was validated following FDA bioanalytical guidelines, evaluating specificity, linearity (r2 > 0.99), precision, accuracy, recovery, matrix effects, carryover, and stability across three rat plasma batches and partial cross-validation in mouse and human plasma.
Under the optimized UPLC conditions, all analytes with diverse polarities were baseline-resolved in a single 7.5 min run. Validation data demonstrated inter- and intra-batch precision and accuracy within ±15% (±20% at LLOQ), recoveries of 88–96%, negligible matrix interference, and no significant carryover. Application to rat plasma after IV acetaminophen at 500 and 1500 mg/kg revealed predominant sulfate and glucuronide conjugates, low levels of detoxification metabolites, and clear dose-dependent pharmacokinetic profiles.
Further method extensions could include addition of other phase II conjugates, integration with high-resolution mass spectrometry for untargeted profiling, automated sample preparation for larger cohorts, and application in personalized dosing and safety monitoring.
The described UPLC-MS/MS method provides a rapid, sensitive, and fully validated approach for comprehensive acetaminophen metabolite profiling in plasma, aligning with regulatory recommendations and facilitating diverse research applications.
LC/MS, LC/MS/MS, LC/QQQ
IndustriesMetabolomics, Clinical Research
ManufacturerWaters
Summary
Significance of the topic
Acetaminophen is one of the most commonly used analgesics and antipyretics worldwide. Monitoring its plasma concentrations and those of its phase II and detoxification metabolites is critical for understanding drug disposition, safety, and potential toxicity in both clinical and preclinical settings.
Study aims and overview
This application note presents a sensitive and validated UPLC-MS/MS research method for the simultaneous quantification of acetaminophen and five key metabolites (sulfate, glucuronide, glutathione, cysteine, and N-acetyl cysteine conjugates) in human and rodent plasma.
Methodology and instrumentation
Sample preparation is based on protein precipitation with methanol and incorporation of stable-isotope internal standards. Calibration standards and QC samples cover: acetaminophen (16–500 ng/mL), acetaminophen glucuronide and sulfate (3.2–100 ng/mL), and glutathione-derived and cysteine/NAC metabolites (0.64–20 ng/mL). Chromatographic separation uses a reversed-phase gradient on a C18 column at 40 °C with a 7.5 min runtime. The method was validated following FDA bioanalytical guidelines, evaluating specificity, linearity (r2 > 0.99), precision, accuracy, recovery, matrix effects, carryover, and stability across three rat plasma batches and partial cross-validation in mouse and human plasma.
Instrumentation used
- ACQUITY UPLC System
- Xevo TQ-S Tandem Quadrupole Mass Spectrometer
- ACQUITY UPLC HSS T3 Column (2.1 × 100 mm, 1.8 μm, 100 Å)
- MassLynx Software with TargetLynx Application Manager
Main results and discussion
Under the optimized UPLC conditions, all analytes with diverse polarities were baseline-resolved in a single 7.5 min run. Validation data demonstrated inter- and intra-batch precision and accuracy within ±15% (±20% at LLOQ), recoveries of 88–96%, negligible matrix interference, and no significant carryover. Application to rat plasma after IV acetaminophen at 500 and 1500 mg/kg revealed predominant sulfate and glucuronide conjugates, low levels of detoxification metabolites, and clear dose-dependent pharmacokinetic profiles.
Benefits and practical applications
- High sensitivity requiring only 5 µL plasma per injection
- Rapid analysis supporting high throughput
- Robust performance across human, mouse, and rat matrices
- Suitable for pharmacokinetic, toxicological, and clinical research studies
Future trends and opportunities
Further method extensions could include addition of other phase II conjugates, integration with high-resolution mass spectrometry for untargeted profiling, automated sample preparation for larger cohorts, and application in personalized dosing and safety monitoring.
Conclusion
The described UPLC-MS/MS method provides a rapid, sensitive, and fully validated approach for comprehensive acetaminophen metabolite profiling in plasma, aligning with regulatory recommendations and facilitating diverse research applications.
Reference
- den Braver MW, Vermeulen NP, Commandeur JN. Generic method for absolute quantification of glutathione S-conjugates. J Chromatogr B Analyt Technol Biomed Life Sci. 2017;1046:185–194.
- Cook SF, King AD, van den Anker JN, Wilkins DG. Simultaneous quantification of acetaminophen and five metabolites in human plasma and urine by HPLC-ESI-MS/MS. J Chromatogr B Analyt Technol Biomed Life Sci. 2015;1007.
- FDA. Guidance for Industry Bioanalytical Method Validation. May 2001.
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