1.Ultra-sensitive bioanalysis of the therapeutic peptide exenatide for accurate pharmacokinetic analyses at effective plasma concentrations utilizing UPLC-MS/MS
Sauter MAX ; Uhl PHILIPP ; Burhenne JÜRGEN ; Haefeli-E WALTER
Journal of Pharmaceutical Analysis 2020;10(3):233-239
Exenatide is the first approved glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonist subcutaneously or intramus-cularly injected for the treatment of type 2 diabetes mellitus. Typical therapeutic plasma concentrations are in the low pg/mL range, therefore requiring ultra-sensitive quantification. To enable the accurate evaluation of pharmacokinetic studies, we established a UPLC-MS/MS assay with a lower limit of quantification (LLOQ) of 5 pg/mL (1.2 pM) using 200μL of plasma, validated according to FDA''s and EMA''s pertinent guidelines. Exenatide was isolated from plasma with solid phase extraction utilizing anion-exchange sorbent. Quantification was performed with positive electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry in the selected reaction monitoring mode. The calibrated concentration range of 5-10,000 pg/mL was linear showing correlation coefficients>0.99. Interday and intraday accuracy ranged from 97.5%to 105.4%with corresponding precision of<10.9%. Accuracy at the LLOQ ranged from 93.0%to 102.5%with corresponding precision of<15.9%. Because of the validity of a 10-fold dilution QC (accuracy 111.2%), the assay is suitable for exenatide quantification up to 100,000 pg/mL. The ultra-sensitive assay''s applicability was demonstrated by the quantification of exenatide plasma concentrations and pharma-cokinetics after intravenous and nasal administration to beagle dogs.
2.Low Exposure to Direct Oral Anticoagulants Is Associated with Ischemic Stroke and Its Severity
Timolaos RIZOS ; Andreas D. MEID ; Andrea HUPPERTZ ; Chris DUMSCHAT ; Jan PURRUCKER ; Kathrin I. FOERSTER ; Jürgen BURHENNE ; David CZOCK ; Ekkehart JENETZKY ; Peter A. RINGLEB ; Walter E. HAEFELI
Journal of Stroke 2022;24(1):88-97
Background:
and purpose In acute stroke patients, plasma concentrations of direct oral anticoagulants (DOAC) at hospital admission only poorly mirror DOAC exposure or the coagulation status at the time of the event. Here, we evaluated whether DOAC exposure and DOAC plasma concentration at the time of transient ischemic attacks (TIA) and ischemic strokes correlate with their likelihood of occurrence.
Methods:
Prospectively, consecutive DOAC patients with acute ischemic stroke or TIA were included. Admission DOAC plasma concentrations were measured by ultraperformance liquid chromatography– tandem mass spectrometry. Individual DOAC exposure (area under the curve) and DOAC concentrations at event onset were derived from population pharmacokinetic analyses.
Results:
DOAC exposure was successfully modeled in 211 patients (ischemic stroke 74.4%, TIA 25.6%). Compared to published values, 63.0% had relatively lower DOAC exposure and they more often received lower DOAC doses than recommended (odds ratio [OR], 2.125; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.039 to 4.560; P=0.044). These patients more likely suffered ischemic strokes than TIA (OR, 2.411; 95% CI, 1.254 to 4.638; P=0.008) and their strokes were more severe (slope, 3.161; 95% CI, 0.741 to 5.58; P=0.011). Low relative DOAC concentrations at event onset were likewise associated with ischemic strokes (OR, 4.123; 95% CI, 1.834 to 9.268; P=0.001), but not to stroke severity (P=0.272). DOAC exposure had a higher explanatory value for stroke severity than concentrations at event.
Conclusions
Low DOAC exposure is strongly associated to ischemic stroke and its severity. By monitoring DOAC plasma concentrations, patients prone to ischemic stroke might be identified.