Determination of the monocyclic beta-lactam antibiotic carumonam in plasma and urine by ion-pair and ion-suppression reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography.
A sensitive and selective high-performance liquid chromatography method has been developed for the determination of the new monocyclic beta-lactam antibiotic carumonam in plasma and urine. The method for plasma involves protein precipitation with acetonitrile and removal of lipids with dichloromethane; urine is diluted with buffer. Separation and quantification are achieved using a mobile phase based on either ion-suppression or ion-pair chromatography on a reversed-phase column with UV detection. The limit of determination is 0.5 micrograms/ml plasma, using a 0.5-ml specimen, and 25 micrograms/ml urine, using a 50-microliter specimen. The inter-assay reproducibility is generally better than 4% when an internal standard is used. Since beta-lactam antibiotics may degrade on storage, close attention must be paid to the stability of these drugs in biological fluids; novel measures to prevent degradation on storage are described. The assay has been successfully applied to the analysis of several thousand samples from pharmacokinetic studies, including a study involving patients with impaired renal function.[1]References
- Determination of the monocyclic beta-lactam antibiotic carumonam in plasma and urine by ion-pair and ion-suppression reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography. Egger, H.J., Fischer, G. J. Chromatogr. (1987) [Pubmed]
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