Fast LC/MS/MS Analytical Method with Alternate Column Regeneration for the Analysis of 125 Various Drugs and Their Metabolites in Urine in Clinical Research
Posters | | Agilent Technologies | MSACLInstrumentation
Rapid multi-analyte detection in clinical research is essential for high-throughput screening, safety monitoring, and pharmacokinetic studies. Combining targeted quantitation of diverse drug classes with fast turnaround supports decision-making in laboratories requiring sensitivity and specificity.
This study aimed to develop and validate a single rapid LC–MS/MS method for simultaneous quantitation of 125 drugs and metabolites in urine. By integrating an Alternate Column Regeneration (ACR) system, the method sought to enhance throughput while maintaining analytical performance across a broad dynamic range.
The workflow involved preparing calibration standards in drug-free human urine (1–1000 ng/mL) with internal standards at 125 ng/mL. A 1 µL aliquot was injected into an Agilent 1290 Infinity II UHPLC coupled to an Agilent 6470 Triple Quadrupole MS. Separation employed two Poroshell 120 EC-C18 columns (2.1×100 mm, 2.7 µm) under a gradient from 12 % to 98 % organic within 2.9 min at 0.35 mL/min. The ACR valve allowed one column to regenerate while the other performed analysis, reducing cycle time from 7.35 to 5.1 min.
Calibration exhibited linear response (R² > 0.99) for 112 analytes across 1–1000 ng/mL; remaining compounds were fitted with quadratic/quartic models. Signal-to-noise ratios at the 1 ng/mL level exceeded 10 for 104 analytes. Retention time reproducibility between columns showed negligible variation. Representative TIC overlays confirmed consistent peak shapes and retention across 10 sequential injections. Within-run precision was below 15 % CV for all analytes.
Further work may explore matrix interferences across diverse urine sources, expand panels to emerging drugs, and integrate high-resolution MS for untargeted screening. Automation of sample preparation and implementation in diagnostic laboratories could broaden applicability.
A fast, sensitive, and specific LC–MS/MS method with alternate column regeneration enables reliable quantitation of 125 drugs and metabolites in urine within a 5.1 min cycle. The approach offers substantial time savings without sacrificing analytical performance, making it suitable for high-throughput clinical and forensic applications.
LC/MS, LC/MS/MS, LC/QQQ
IndustriesClinical Research
ManufacturerAgilent Technologies
Summary
Importance of the Topic
Rapid multi-analyte detection in clinical research is essential for high-throughput screening, safety monitoring, and pharmacokinetic studies. Combining targeted quantitation of diverse drug classes with fast turnaround supports decision-making in laboratories requiring sensitivity and specificity.
Study Goals and Overview
This study aimed to develop and validate a single rapid LC–MS/MS method for simultaneous quantitation of 125 drugs and metabolites in urine. By integrating an Alternate Column Regeneration (ACR) system, the method sought to enhance throughput while maintaining analytical performance across a broad dynamic range.
Methodology and Instrumentation
The workflow involved preparing calibration standards in drug-free human urine (1–1000 ng/mL) with internal standards at 125 ng/mL. A 1 µL aliquot was injected into an Agilent 1290 Infinity II UHPLC coupled to an Agilent 6470 Triple Quadrupole MS. Separation employed two Poroshell 120 EC-C18 columns (2.1×100 mm, 2.7 µm) under a gradient from 12 % to 98 % organic within 2.9 min at 0.35 mL/min. The ACR valve allowed one column to regenerate while the other performed analysis, reducing cycle time from 7.35 to 5.1 min.
Results and Discussion
Calibration exhibited linear response (R² > 0.99) for 112 analytes across 1–1000 ng/mL; remaining compounds were fitted with quadratic/quartic models. Signal-to-noise ratios at the 1 ng/mL level exceeded 10 for 104 analytes. Retention time reproducibility between columns showed negligible variation. Representative TIC overlays confirmed consistent peak shapes and retention across 10 sequential injections. Within-run precision was below 15 % CV for all analytes.
Benefits and Practical Applications
- High throughput: 30 % reduction in analysis time via ACR.
- Comprehensive panel: quantitation of 125 compounds in a single run.
- Low detection limits: reliable quantitation down to 1 ng/mL.
- Robustness: high linearity and reproducibility support clinical and forensic workflows.
Used Instrumentation
- UHPLC: Agilent 1290 Infinity II with dual binary pumps, multisampler (5 °C), column compartment (55 °C).
- MS: Agilent 6470 Triple Quadrupole with AJS ESI source.
- Columns: 2×Poroshell 120 EC-C18, 2.1×100 mm, 2.7 µm.
- Mobile phases: A: H₂O + 5 mM ammonium formate + 0.01 % formic acid; B: MeOH + 0.01 % formic acid.
- Flow rate: 0.35 mL/min; injection volume: 1 µL; needle wash: IPA:MeOH:ACN:H₂O (50:20:20:10).
Future Trends and Potential Applications
Further work may explore matrix interferences across diverse urine sources, expand panels to emerging drugs, and integrate high-resolution MS for untargeted screening. Automation of sample preparation and implementation in diagnostic laboratories could broaden applicability.
Conclusion
A fast, sensitive, and specific LC–MS/MS method with alternate column regeneration enables reliable quantitation of 125 drugs and metabolites in urine within a 5.1 min cycle. The approach offers substantial time savings without sacrificing analytical performance, making it suitable for high-throughput clinical and forensic applications.
References
- Feng J., et al. Simultaneous Determination of Multiple Drugs of Abuse and Relevant Metabolites in Urine by LC-MS/MS. Journal of Analytical Toxicology, 2007, 31.
Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.
Similar PDF
Fast Screening Method for 86 Forensic Analytes in Human Urine using the QTRAP® 4500 LC-MS/MS System
2017|SCIEX|Applications
Fast Screening Method for 86 Forensic Analytes in Human Urine using the QTRAP® 4500 LC-MS/MS System Holly McCall, Xiang He, and Alexandre Wang SCIEX, 1201 Radio Rd, Redwood City, CA 94065, USA Overview This technical note introduces the rapid screening…
Key words
alpha, alphacxp, cxptapentadol, tapentadolfentanyl, fentanylems, emsurine, urinebuphedrone, buphedronemitragynine, mitragyninescheduled, scheduleddesmethyldoxepin, desmethyldoxepinnorpropoxyphene, norpropoxypheneppp, pppsufentanil, sufentanilmethedrone, methedronecyclobenzaprine
Forensic Screening for Drugs in Urine Using High-Resolution MS/MS Spectra and Simplified High-Performance Screening Software
2015|Thermo Fisher Scientific|Applications
Ap plica t ion Note 61 6 Forensic Screening for Drugs in Urine Using High-Resolution MS/MS Spectra and Simplified High-Performance Screening Software Marta Kozak, Kristine Van Natta, Thermo Fisher Scientific, San Jose, CA Key Words Q Exactive Focus, ToxFinder, forensic…
Key words
isotopic, isotopicpattern, patternmatching, matchingtoxfinder, toxfinderfull, fulllod, loddesmethyl, desmethylglucuronide, glucuronidehydroxy, hydroxylibrary, librarycyclobenzaprine, cyclobenzaprineanalyte, analytenordiazepam, nordiazepamexactive, exactivetramadol
Consolidating LC MS/MS Method Conditions for the Analysis of Alcohol Metabolites, Barbiturates, and Drugs of Abuse
2022|Restek|Posters
Consolidating LC-MS/MS Method Conditions for the Analysis of Alcohol Metabolites, Barbiturates, and Drugs of Abuse Jamie York, Justin Steimling; Connor Flannery; Restek Corporation ESI (-) Mode Barbiturates, THCA-A, and THC-COOH LC Column and Mobile Phases Abstract & Introduction Efficiency is…
Key words
min, mindesmethyltramadol, desmethyltramadolisobars, isobarscitalopram, citalopramalpha, alphabenzoylecgonine, benzoylecgoninemorphine, morphineanalyte, analyteforce, forcendesmethylflunitrazepam, ndesmethylflunitrazepambiphenyl, biphenyldidesmethyl, didesmethyletoricoxib, etoricoxibezogabine, ezogabineiloperidone
SOFT: Consolidating LC-MS/MS Method Conditions for the Analysis of Alcohol Metabolites, Barbiturates, and Drugs of Abuse
2022|Restek|Posters
Consolidating LC-MS/MS Method Conditions for the Analysis of Alcohol Metabolites, Barbiturates, and Drugs of Abuse Jamie York, Justin Steimling; Restek Corporation LC Column and Mobile Phases Abstract & Introduction Efficiency is key when running multiple drug panels and any way…
Key words
min, mindesmethyltramadol, desmethyltramadolalpha, alphacitalopram, citalopramisobars, isobarsbenzoylecgonine, benzoylecgoninemorphine, morphineanalyte, analytebiphenyl, biphenylforce, forcedidesmethyl, didesmethyletoricoxib, etoricoxibezogabine, ezogabineiloperidone, iloperidoneparecoxib