Huan Tong , Yong Qiao , Yang Deng, Fang Yuan, Debiao Xiang, Siwei Guo, Bing Xu, Xin Li
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Individualized medication with peptide antibiotics, guided by therapeutic drug monitoring, is essential to treat infections caused by multidrug-resistant bacteria. Peptide antibiotics exhibit an “on-off” elution mechanism on a C18 column, leading to adsorption at the column inlet in all-aqueous conditions. Unlike small molecules, column length minimally influences their retention, with longer columns simply broadening peptide antibiotic peaks due to unnecessary post-column volume. Our theory suggests short columns can achieve comparable separation quality and enable faster analysis. Consequently, we developed a rapid LC-MS/MS method using an ultra-short (4 × 2.0 mm) column to quantify five peptide antibiotics in human plasma simultaneously. Calibration curves demonstrated strong linear regression (R2 > 0.996). The inter- and intra-accuracy at the three QC levels ranged from 86.7 % to 109.1 %, and at the LLOQ, it was between 87.6 % and 116.0 %. The precision for QCs and LLOQ was consistently below 11.7 % and 18.5 %, respectively. This method, characterized by simplicity and universality, was undoubtedly useful in clinically tailoring peptide antibiotic medication for individual patients.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Chromatography B publishes papers on developments in separation science relevant to biology and biomedical research including both fundamental advances and applications. Analytical techniques which may be considered include the various facets of chromatography, electrophoresis and related methods, affinity and immunoaffinity-based methodologies, hyphenated and other multi-dimensional techniques, and microanalytical approaches. The journal also considers articles reporting developments in sample preparation, detection techniques including mass spectrometry, and data handling and analysis.
Developments related to preparative separations for the isolation and purification of components of biological systems may be published, including chromatographic and electrophoretic methods, affinity separations, field flow fractionation and other preparative approaches.
Applications to the analysis of biological systems and samples will be considered when the analytical science contains a significant element of novelty, e.g. a new approach to the separation of a compound, novel combination of analytical techniques, or significantly improved analytical performance.