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Approach to evaluating dried blood spot sample stability during drying process and discovery of a treated card to maintain analyte stability by rapid on-card pH modification
- Source :
- Analytical chemistry. 83(23)
- Publication Year :
- 2011
-
Abstract
- Unstable drug candidates often lead to complexity for both sample collection and bioanalysis. Dried blood spot (DBS) technology is believed to be a viable solution to address this problem. However, it is currently a challenge to evaluate compound stability on DBS due to its solid format. The observed compound loss on a DBS card could be degradation and/or incomplete recovery. Therefore, a reliable bioanalytical method which can differentiate recovery loss from degradation is necessary for such stability evaluation. In this paper, the stability of an unstable drug candidate (KAI-9803) in human blood was evaluated using DBS. A reliable approach to evaluating analyte stability on DBS was developed with an appropriate time-zero sample, a consistent DBS sample processing method, and a suitable positive control. Commercially available DBS cards were evaluated, and it was found that KAI-9803 degraded during the drying process. An in-house modified DBS card was developed and demonstrated to be able to stabilize KAI-9803 during the drying process by rapidly lowering the pH of the spotted blood sample. The storage stability of KAI-9803 in human blood on this new card has been established for at least 48 days at room temperature. This in-house modified DBS card could provide a generic approach for other compounds which require stabilization at a low pH.
- Subjects :
- Analyte
Bioanalysis
Chromatography
Chemistry
Process (computing)
Temperature
Positive control
Hydrogen-Ion Concentration
Sample stability
Citric Acid
Analytical Chemistry
Dried blood spot
surgical procedures, operative
Drug Stability
Tandem Mass Spectrometry
Humans
Sample collection
Dried Blood Spot Testing
Peptides
Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15206882
- Volume :
- 83
- Issue :
- 23
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Analytical chemistry
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....08cbf3217f355fa20bfceed3a5014321