The routine techniques currently applied for the determination of nicotine and its major metabolites, cotinine, and -3'-hydroxycotinine, in biological fluids, include spectrophotometric, immunoassays, and chromatographic techniques. The aim of this study was to develop, and compare two new chromatographic methods high-performance liquid chromatography coupled to triple quadrupole mass spectrometry (HPLC-QQQ-MS/MS), and RP-HPLC enriched with chaotropic additives, which would allow reliable confirmation of tobacco smoke exposure in toxicological and epidemiological studies. The concentrations of analytes were determined in human plasma as the sample matrix. The methods were compared in terms of the linearity, accuracy, repeatability, detection and quantification limits (LOD and LOQ), and recovery. The obtained validation parameters met the ICH requirements for both proposed procedures. However, the limits of detection (LOD) were much better for HPLC-QQQ-MS/MS (0.07 ng mL for -3'-hydroxcotinine; 0.02 ng mL for cotinine; 0.04 ng mL for nicotine) in comparison to the RP-HPLC-DAD enriched with chaotropic additives (1.47 ng mL for -3'-hydroxcotinine; 1.59 ng mL for cotinine; 1.50 ng mL for nicotine). The extraction efficiency (%) was concentration-dependent and ranged between 96.66% and 99.39% for RP-HPLC-DAD and 76.8% to 96.4% for HPLC-QQQ-MS/MS. The usefulness of the elaborated analytical methods was checked on the example of the analysis of a blood sample taken from a tobacco smoker. The nicotine, cotinine, and -3'-hydroxycotinine contents in the smoker's plasma quantified by the RP-HPLC-DAD method differed from the values measured by the HPLC-QQQ-MS/MS. However, the relative errors of measurements were smaller than 10% (6.80%, 6.72%, 2.04% respectively).
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8839739 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules27030682 | DOI Listing |
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