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1.
Anal Bioanal Chem ; 405(8): 2585-94, 2013 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23314487

ABSTRACT

A recently developed capillary electrophoresis (CE)-negative-ionisation mass spectrometry (MS) method was used to profile anionic metabolites in a microbial-host co-metabolism study. Urine samples from rats receiving antibiotics (penicillin G and streptomycin sulfate) for 0, 4, or 8 days were analysed. A quality control sample was measured repeatedly to monitor the performance of the applied CE-MS method. After peak alignment, relative standard deviations (RSDs) for migration time of five representative compounds were below 0.4 %, whereas RSDs for peak area were 7.9-13.5 %. Using univariate and principal component analysis of obtained urinary metabolic profiles, groups of rats receiving different antibiotic treatment could be distinguished based on 17 discriminatory compounds, of which 15 were downregulated and 2 were upregulated upon treatment. Eleven compounds remained down- or upregulated after discontinuation of the antibiotics administration, whereas a recovery effect was observed for others. Based on accurate mass, nine compounds were putatively identified; these included the microbial-mammalian co-metabolites hippuric acid and indoxyl sulfate. Some discriminatory compounds were also observed by other analytical techniques, but CE-MS uniquely revealed ten metabolites modulated by antibiotic exposure, including aconitic acid and an oxocholic acid. This clearly demonstrates the added value of CE-MS for nontargeted profiling of small anionic metabolites in biological samples.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents/metabolism , Anti-Bacterial Agents/urine , Electrophoresis, Capillary/methods , Mass Spectrometry/methods , Metabolome , Animals , Penicillin G/metabolism , Penicillin G/urine , Rats , Streptomycin/metabolism , Streptomycin/urine
2.
Int J Pharm ; 357(1-2): 108-18, 2008 Jun 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18394831

ABSTRACT

Near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopy was employed as a process analytical technique in three steps of tabletting process: to monitor the blend homogeneity, evaluate the content uniformity of tablets and determine the tablets coating thickness. A diode-array spectrometer mounted on a lab blender (SP15 NIR lab blender) was used to monitor blend uniformity using a calibration-free model with drug concentration ranging from 2.98 to 9.25% (w/w). The method developed accurately depicted the changes in concentration of the drug during blending and the positive effect of a delumping step in the production process. Blend homogeneity was reached within 2 min of the blending step post-delumping, with relative standard deviation (R.S.D.) values varying from 1.0 to 2.5% depending on the drug concentration of the blend. A Fourier-transform spectrometer (Bruker MPA) was used to analyze content uniformity and coating thickness with calibration based models. Prediction of a validation set with tablets compacted at pressures not present in the calibration set yielded an root mean square error of cross validation (RMSEP) of 1.94%; prediction of tablets compacted at pressures present in the calibration set yielded a RMSEP of 1.48%. Performance of the model was influenced by several physical tablet properties, which could be reduced by spectral pre-processing. A model based on reflectance spectra predicted coating thickness and its variation more accurately than the model based on transmission spectra. Inter-tablet coating variation was predicted with NIR and compared to reference thickness measurements. Both methods gave comparable results. Initial inter-tablet variation of tablets sampled in-process during coating was high, but stabilized after 30 min into the process.


Subject(s)
Tablets, Enteric-Coated/standards , Chromatography, Liquid , Drug Compounding , Excipients , Models, Statistical , Reproducibility of Results , Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet , Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared , Spectroscopy, Near-Infrared , Tablets, Enteric-Coated/analysis
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