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High Resolution Designer Drug Screening using a High-Sensitivity Q-TOF Mass Spectrometer and an Extended Tandem Mass Spectrum Library

Posters | 2019 | ShimadzuInstrumentation
LC/TOF, LC/HRMS, LC/MS, LC/MS/MS
Industries
Forensics
Manufacturer
Shimadzu

Summary

Significance of the Topic


The rapid proliferation of novel designer drugs poses a serious challenge to forensic and clinical toxicology, as traditional targeted methods often fail to detect emerging compounds. High-resolution screening techniques coupled with comprehensive spectral libraries are essential to ensure timely identification of new psychoactive substances and support public health and legal investigations.

Objectives and Study Overview


This work aimed to develop and validate a high-sensitivity LC-Q-TOF MS/MS method, augmented by an extended tandem mass spectrum library, to enhance forensic screening of designer drugs. The approach integrates targeted and non-targeted workflows to detect both known and novel cannabinoid analogues in biological matrices.

Methodology and Instrumentation


Authentic standards for over 350 designer cannabinoids were acquired and used to build a high-resolution MS/MS library, employing:
  • Collision energies fixed at 10–60 eV (11 steps) and expanded CE spread modes of ±17 and ±25 eV for comprehensive fragmentation coverage
  • UHPLC separation on a biphenyl column with a gradient of ammonium formate/formic acid in water and acetonitrile
  • Electrospray ionization in positive mode, high-resolution MS1 scan (>30 000 Rp) and data-dependent MS2 acquisition
  • Sample preparation via protein precipitation, solid-phase extraction, and reconstitution for LC-MS analysis

Instrumentation:
  • High-sensitivity Q-TOF mass spectrometer
  • UHPLC system with biphenyl stationary phase
  • Electrospray ion source with optimized gas flows and temperatures

Main Results and Discussion


Accurate mass measurements of precursors and fragments were consistently within 1.5 ppm (usually <0.8 ppm), with stable resolving power around 30 000. Extracted ion chromatograms revealed 185 unique precursor ions from the library. The CE spread function consolidated fragment coverage equivalent to multiple fixed-CE acquisitions. In ten post-mortem blood samples, targeted screening identified substances such as AB-CHMINACA, 5F-PY-PICA and the 5F-ADB metabolite 7 based on retention time, accurate mass and MS2 match. Non-targeted analysis further detected novel metabolites by leveraging feature extraction and library matching, illustrating the method’s versatility.

Benefits and Practical Applications


The combined high-sensitivity Q-TOF and expanded spectral library enable:
  • Comprehensive detection of a broad range of synthetic cannabinoids
  • Rapid differentiation of isobaric or closely related analogues through characteristic fragmentation patterns
  • Simultaneous targeted and untargeted workflows for known and emerging compounds
  • Enhanced forensic case support with reliable identification criteria

Future Trends and Opportunities


Continued expansion of spectral databases and integration of machine learning for fragment prediction can accelerate identification of unknowns. Real-time library updates via shared cloud platforms may further improve responsiveness to the appearance of new designer drugs. Hybrid acquisition strategies combining data-dependent and data-independent modes could also increase coverage and throughput.

Conclusion


This study demonstrates that a high-sensitivity Q-TOF MS instrument, paired with an extended tandem mass spectrum library and flexible collision energy schemes, provides a robust platform for comprehensive designer drug screening. The method facilitates both targeted identification of known cannabinoids and untargeted discovery of novel metabolites in complex biological samples.

References


No external references were provided in the source document.

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