A sensitive and reproducible liquid chromatography-electrospray ionization-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) method was developed and validated for the quantification of amlodipine in human plasma, with gliclazide as an internal standard (IS). The analyte was extracted with ethyl acetate and analyzed on a Diamond C18 (150 mm× 4.6 mm , 5 μm) column. The mobile phase was composed of methanol ?10 mM ammonium acetate with gradient flow rates and gradient conditions. Amlodipine and IS were ionized by positive ion pneumatically assisted electrospray and detected in the multi-reaction monitoring (MRM) mode using precursor→productions of m/z 409.2→238.1, 294.1 and m/z 324.2→127.3, respectively. The specificity, matrix effect, recovery, sensitivity, linearity, accuracy, precision, and stabilities were all validated over the concentration range of 0.05 - 12 ng/mL. The 90% confidence interval (CI) for AUC0-t, AUC0-∞ and Cmax ratios (test: reference) were all within 80 % - 125% interval proposed by FDA. It is concluded that the validated method can successfully fulfill the requirement of clinical bioequivalence study of amlodipine in healthy Chinese subjects after administration of amlodipine/losartan combination tablets and amlodipine tablets , and the test and reference tablets were bioequivalent.
Calcium channel blockers have been widely used in the treatment of hypertension and angina pectoris, and combination therapy with an angiotensin II receptor blocker would enhance antihypertensive activity with greater efficacy and better tolerability, which maximize the blood pressure-lowering effects and minimize the severity of their side effects of each component [1-3].
Losartan is an active and highly specific non-peptide angiotensin II receptor blocker for the treatment of hypertension and heart failure. Its major active metabolite, EXP3174 is 10 to 40 times more potent than parent losartan in blocking the angiotensin II [4,5].
Amlodipine, (R,S)-2-[(2-aminoethoxy) methyl]-4-(2- chlorophenyl)-3-ethoxycarbonyl-5-methoxycarbonyl-6methyl-1,4-dihydropyridine (
Numerous analytical methods have been reported for the quantification of amlodipine in plasma, such as gas chromategraphy (GC) with electron capture detection [9, 10], high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) with fluorimetric detection [7,11] or with UV detection [
Sample pretreatment has also been an item of interest for the analysis of amlodipine in biological samples. Previous methods included solid-phase extraction (SPE), protein precipitation and Liquid-liquid extraction (LLE). SPE is relatively expensive, time-consuming and complex for a large number of samples collected and treated. X-Terra (C18) [
In this study, a simple, sensitive, precise, economical and less toxic LC-MS/MS method based on the LLE with ethyl acetate for the determination of amlodipine in plasma was established and applied to bioequivalence study of amlodipine in healthy Chinese subjects. Gliclazide (
The standards of amlodipine besylate (lot: 100,374 - 200,602) and gliclazide (IS, lot: 100,269 - 200,402) were obtained from the National Institute for the Control of Pharmaceutical and Biological Products, Beijing China. Methanol (lot: K50E30) and ethyl acetate (lot: H39B05) were both of HPLC grade, from J. T. Baker. Ammonium acetate (lot: 10,133,751) was analytical grade, from A
Jonson Mattery Company. Blank human plasma was provided by Shandong Blood Center. Purified water was obtained from the Company of Wahaha. The Compound Amlodipine Tablets (lot: 100,901), 5 mg amlodipine and 50 mg losartan per tablet, was provided by Shangrui Pharmaceutical (Si-Chun) Co., Ltd, China. Amlodipine Besylate Tablet (5 mg per tablet, lot: 1,005,061), was provided by Pfizer Inc.
Agilent 1200 series HPLC system (equipped with a G1312B duplex pump, a G1379B vacuum degasser, a G1316B thermostated column compartment and a G1367C autosampler) and an Agilent 6410 Triple Quadrupole mass spectrometer equipped with an electrospray ionization source (Agilent Technologies, USA) were used for mass detection. The chromategraphic separation was achieved on a Diamond C18 (150 mm × 4.6 mm, 5 μm) column. All data were acquired employing Agilent 6410 Quantitative Analysis version analyst data processing software.
The chromatographic separation was achieved on a Diamond C18 column (150 mm × 4.6 mm, 5 μm) at 30˚C with a thermostated column oven. The mobile phase was methanol mixed with 10 mM ammonium acetate solution, with gradient flow rates and varied ratio of mobile phase (
Mass spectrometric analysis was performed on a Series 6410 Triple Quad LC-MS/MS in electrospray positive ionization using multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) mode. The mass transition was m/z 409.2→238.1, 294.1 for amlodipine and m/z 324.2→127.3 for IS, respecttively. The other working parameters of the mass spectrometer were as follows: dwell time (200 ms); protective air of nitrogen gas (9 L/min); gas temperature (350˚C); spray gas pressure (350 Pa); capillary voltage (4000 V); nebulizer pressure (45 psi); the fragment electric voltage (120 V for amlodipine and 110 V for IS); the collision energy
%B*: the proportion of the organic phase.
(12 eV for amlodipine and 17 eV for IS) and the EMV (200 V).
The column was washed with a 95:5 water-methanol (v/v) mobile phase for 40 min and then with methanol for 40 min between batches.
Because of amlodipine’s photo labile property, the whole process of the experiment must be operated in the dark place.
The accurately weighed amlodipine besylate and gliclazide (IS) were dissolved in methanol to result in 1 mg/mL mother liquor of amlodipine (equivalent to approximately 1 mg/mL of the free base) and IS, respectively. Working standard solutions of amlodipine in the concentration range of 1.25 - 300 ng/mL were prepared by independent dilution of 1 mg/mL stock solution with 10 mM ammonium acetate-methanol (20:80, v/v). The IS was dissolved with 10 mM ammonium acetate-methanol (20:80, v/v) to get an 80 ng/mL standard working solution. All solutions were stored at 4˚C and dark places with no evidence of decomposition, and equilibrated to room temperature before use (approximately 15 min).
The calibration curve standard and quality control (QC) samples were freshly prepared by spiking 20 µL of the appropriate standard solutions with drug-free human plasma. The final concentrations of calibration standard in plasma consist of eight nonzero concentrations (0.05, 0.1, 0.2, 0.5, 1.0, 3.0, 6.0, 12.0 ng/mL), and QC samples, which were used in the validation and during the bioequivalence study, were 0.1 (LQC), 1.0 (MQC) and 10.0 ng/mL (HQC) for amlodipine. The human plasma volume for calibration and QC samples was 0.5 mL.
A liquid-liquid extraction method was used for the extraction of amlodipine and IS from plasma. 0.5 mL plasma sample was mixed with 20 μL of the IS working solution (80 ng/mL gliclazide in mobile phase) and 4 mL of ethyl acetate, vortex-mixed for 3 min, and centrifuged at 8000 rpm for 5 min. Then, 3.2 mL organic phase was transferred to a clean tube and evaporated to dryness under gentle stream of nitrogen gas at 37˚C. The residue was reconstituted with 200 μL mobile phase, and 20 μL was injected onto the LC-MS/MS for analysis.
The assays of amlodipine in human plasma were validated for assay specificity, matrix effect, recovery, sensitivity, linearity, precision, accuracy, and stability according to the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) [
Chromatograms of six different lots of blank human plasma were identified for inspecting analytes from the potential interference of endogenous substances at the peak region (amlodipine and IS).
The specificity of the method was evaluated by comparing chromatograms of blank plasma, amlodipine and IS standard, blank plasma spiked with amlodipine and IS, plasma sample from a subject after oral administration of compound amlodipine tablets (10 mg/100mg, amlodipine/losartan).
Blank plasma samples were extracted and then spiked with amlodipine at three concentration levels (0.25 ng/mL as low, 2.5 ng/mL as medium and 25 ng/mL as high) and IS in five replicates at each concentration level, respectively, to evaluate the matrix effects of plasma. The corresponding peak areas were compared with those of standard solutions, and peak area ratio was defined as the matrix effect. The matrix suppression was assessed by post-column infusion of an analyte with a syringe pump post column into the MS detector. The extracted blank matrix was injected by an autosampler onto the analytical column. The MS monitored the signal level from post-column infused analyte solution when injecting blank plasma sample.
The extraction recoveries of amlodipine were evaluated by comparing peak areas of amlodipine extracted from plasma with those of samples to which the analytes had been added after extraction at equivalent concentrations. Five replicates for each QC level were performed with the established extraction procedure. The extraction recovery of IS was evaluated in a similar way at 3.2 ng/mL.
The calibration curve was prepared by analyzing spiked calibration samples at eight different concentration levels on every batch of analysis. Every calibration standard was injected in five replicates. Calibration curves were typically described by the equation y = ax + b, where y corresponds to the peak-area ratio of amlodipine to IS and x represents the plasma concentration of amlodipine. The linearity of calibration curve was assessed by linear regression with a weighting factor of the reciprocal of the concentration squared (1/x2). The low limit of quantification (LLOQ) was evaluated by analyzing five replicates of spiked samples at the concentration of 0.05 ng/mL with acceptable precision.
The intraor inter-assay precision and accuracy were assessed by analyzing spiked samples at three concentration levels in human plasma (0.1 ng/mL, 1 ng/mL and 10 ng/mL) on the same day or on three consecutive days, and five replicates at each concentration level were applied. The mean value of RE for the accuracy should be within 15% of the actual value except at LLOQ, where it should not deviate by more than 20%. The relative standard deviation (RSD) or CV%, for the precision, determined at each concentration level should not exceed 15% except at LLOQ, where it should not exceed 20%.
The stability of amlodipine in plasma was evaluated by analyzing samples with five replicates at each concentration level under different study conditions, including the post-extracted samples in the HPLC auto-samples for 0 h (fresh samples) and 7 h at ambient temperature (24˚C ± 2˚C), the plasma samples of three QC levels after storage at −20˚C for 1, 7 and 106 days respectively, and after one or two freeze-thaw cycles (−20˚C to 25˚C). The samples were processed as described above and the criterion for acceptability of the data is the same with that for the precision and accuracy.
This randomized, open-label, single-dose, two-crossover bioequivalence study was conducted at the Institute of Clinical Pharmacology, Qilu Hospital of Shandong University. The protocol was approved by the Ethics Committee of Qilu Hospital, Shandong University, Jinan, China, and the study was conformed to the principle of the Declaration of Helsinki.
Twenty four healthy Chinese male subjects, aged 21 to 29 years, were involved for the study. All subjects included were within the permitted range for their height and frame, in good health, and had no major organ dysfunction as determined by medical history, physical examination, electrocardiogram (ECG) findings, and routine laboratory testing. All subjects agreed to participate in the trial and signed the approved informed-consent form voluntarily.
Subjects arrived at the study center in the evening before dosing and fasted for at least 10 hours. Each Subject enrolled in the study was uniquely assigned, according to a predetermined randomization schedule which provided the order of treatments. Subjects received two tablets of compound amlodipine tablets (10 mg/100mg, amlodipine/losartan) or two tablets of amlodipine besylate tablets (10 mg) and losartan potassium tablets (100 mg). Subjects ingested the tablets with 250 mL of water without chewing or crushing, no water was allowed 1 h before and 2 h after the administration under supervision of study personnel. A washout period of 14 days separated the two periods. Tolerability was assessed by physician examination and laboratory testing. Each subject received a physical monitoring and laboratory safety tests prior to leaving the institute in the morning of the 17th day.
Blood samples were drawn at pre-dose (baseline) and at 0.25, 0.5, 0.75, 1, 1.5, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 10, 12, 24, 36, 48, 72, 96, 144 and 168 hours post-dose during each study period. Samples were immediately collected into sodium-heparinized tubes and centrifuged at 5000 rpm for 5 minutes at 4˚C within 30 minutes of collection. Plasma was separated, transported into EP tubes, and stored at −20˚C for pending analysis.
The bioequivalence of the test and reference formulations was assessed by calculating individual test/reference ratios for the peak of amlodipine concentration (Cmax), area under the plasma concentration-time curve from 0 to last measurable time (AUC0-t) amd from 0 to infinity (AUC0-∞). The pharmacokinetic parameters including Cmax, time to maximum plasma concentration (Tmax) were calculated directly from the measured data. The terminal elimination half-life (t1/2), AUC0-t and AUC0-∞ were calculated by using Drug and Statistics Software-Version 2.0 (DAS, version 2.0.1, by Sun Ruiyuan et al., China).
All data are presented as mean ± standard deviation. Statistical significance was assessed by two-way factorial analysis of variance test followed by Duncan’s multiple comparison between groups. Based on guidance from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) definition, a 90% confidence interval (CI) of the In-transformed ratios should fall between 80% and 125%. A probability level of p < 0.05 was considered to be statistically significant.
Typical MRM chromatograms of blank plasma, amlodipine and IS standard, blank plasma spiked with amlodipine and IS, plasma from a subject after administration of amlodipine test tablets spiked with IS were shown in
Matrix effect and extraction recovery data from plasma of individual subjects who did not receive amlodipine were summarized in
Correlation coefficient (r2), which indicates linearity over the calibration range of amlodipine, was calculated by using the 1/x2 model. The calibration curve was linear over the amlodipine concentration ranges of 0.05 - 12 ng/mL in human plasma with a coefficient of correlated (r2) > 0.99. A typical equation of the calibration curve was y = 0.6630x − 0.00065 (r2 = 0.9918).
The LLOQ (0.05 ng/mL) was defined with acceptable accuracy and precision. The analyte response at the LLOQ should be at least five times the response of blank baseline. A good signal-to-noise ratio (S/N > 10) was observed at the LLOQ. Intra-assay precision and accuracy were satisfactory for the LLOQ, and RSD values were less than 5% (
Precision and accuracy data for intraand inter-day plasma samples of amlodipine are shown in
The stability results of amlodipine in plasma were summarized in
The whole assay was conducted strictly in accordance with the current Good Clinical Practices. In total, 24 healthy male subjects completed the study, and underwent PK and safety evaluations. The demographic profiles did not differ compared with the previous, all oral doses were well tolerated by the subjects, as no adverse events reported. Mean PK parameters derived from 24 male subjects after the administration of 10 mg amlodipine tablets and the 90% CI for the treatment ratio (test: reference) of AUC0-t, AUC0-∞, Cmax were all listed in
A stable analyte has to be used as IS to deal with sample matrix effects. It was difficult to find a compound that could ideally mirror the analyte to serve as a suitable IS. The chosen of IS should match the chromatographic properties, recovery and ionization properties of the analyte. In the initia phase, several compounds were investigated, such as lorazepam, matrine, ammothamnine and theocin, but the former three had long retention time and theocin had double humps. Finally gliclazide, a readily available compound, was selected as the IS in positive ion mode. Its chromatographic behavior and extraction
efficiency were similar to amlodipine, stable in plasma and reproducible in the LC/MS/MS system. In addition, there were no interferences from amlodipine and endogenous substances.
A sample pre-treatment method should remove interferences from the biological sample and also be reproducible with a high recovery involving a minimum number of working steps. Protein precipitation (PPT), liquid-liquid extraction (LLE) and solid-phase extraction (SPE) were tested to obtain a simple and excellent plasma preparation procedure. PPT was easy to dilute the sample, but failed to sufficiently remove endogenous interference. SPE had too many disturbances, which contributed to poor reproducibility and poor recovery. What is more, the column for SPE is relatively expensive for a large quantity of samples. LLE was advantageous for producing chromatographia clean samples with sufficient efficiency and specificity, and it also minimized cost. In addition, LLE was essential for minimizing ion suppression and matrix effects in HPLC-MS/MS analysis. LLE with various extraction solvents, including ethyl acetate, diethyl ether-dichloromethane (2:1, v/v) and diethyl ether, was investigated and evaluated for acceptable extraction recoveries and matrix effect. Diethyl ether, extraction recoveries were about 20.12% and unacceptable, chloroform was easy to emulsify when the sample was made vortex and mixed, and its recover was about 31.20%. Ethyl acetate was adopted with the weakest matrix effect, no-concentration-dependent extraction recovery and acceptable matrix effect. Furthermore, sodium hydroxide (1 mol/L) added to extraction solvents was also tested, and there were not significant difference for peak area and retention time of amlodipine.
Solvents for reconstituting residues were also investigated to optimize the chromatographic behaviors. Acetonitrile, methanol, 10 mM ammonium acetate and mobile phase were compared and evaluated for optimizing peak shape and maximum peak response. Finally, mobile phase with good peak shape and maximum response was adopted.
A simple chromatographic separation was developed for amlodipine with acquisition of good separation. Compositions of mobile phase were investigated to optimize the chromatographic behaviors of amlodipine. The feasibility of various mixtures of solvents such as acetonitrile and methanol using different buffers, such as ammonium acetate, ammonium formate and formic acid, along with altered flow-rates (in the range of 0.5 - 1 mL/min), was tested to identify the optimal mobile phase that produced the best sensitivity, efficiency and peak shape. Finally, chromatographic separation was operated by gradient flow rates and varied ratio of mobile phase system consisting of methanol −10 mM ammonium acetate to suppress the matrix effect from blank plasma in positive ionization mode. As the temperature increased, the peak area of amlodipine became smaller and retention time appeared earlier, therefore, the column temperature was maintained at 30˚C.
MS parameters were tuned in both positive and negative ionization modes for amlodipine and IS. However, a good response was found in positive ionization mode. The solutions containing amlodipine and IS were injected directly into the mass spectrometer. Under these conditions, the analytes yielded major ions at [M + H]+ m/z 409.2 and [M + Na]+ m/z 431.2 for amlodipine and [M + H]+ m/z 324.2 for IS. Each of precursor ions was subjected to collision-induced dissociation to determine the resulting product ions. The product ion mass spectra of amlodipine and IS are shown in
Above all, the sensitive and specific LC-MS/MS method in this study allowed a better characterization of the PK profiles of amlodipine.
As reported in the literatures, amlodipine is extensively metabolized in the liver and then redistributed into the systemic circulation, resulting in a long time to Cmax (6 - 12 hours) and a long elimination half-life t1/2 (30 - 50 hours) in healthy subjects [
After two-one side t-test following ANOVA to Cmax, AUC0-t and AUC0-∞, no significant difference was found among compound amlodipine tablets (10 mg/100mg, amlodipine/losaran) and 10 mg amlodipine tablets in 24 healthy male subjects. The 90% CI of test and reference mean ratio for Cmax, AUC0-t and AUC0-∞ were all ranged from 80% to 125%. Therefore, it was concluded that both formulations (test and reference) achieved equivalent bioavailability.
In summary, a highly sensitive, specific, reproducible and high-throughput LC-MS/MS method was developed and validated based on the procedure of LLE for quantification of amlodipine pharmacokinetic and bioequivalence studies. The extraction procedure and LC-MS/MS conditions were optimized inorder to improve the sensitivity and robustness of the method. Finally, the achieved limit of quantification (0.05 ng/mL) was sensitive for plasma amlodipine determination and for its the pharmacokinetic parameters calculation, and the procedure was fully validated to meet the requirements for sensitivity, accuracy and precision defined by State Food and Drug Administration and GLP Guidelines for Industry where more than 2200 samples were analyzed.
The amlodipine relative bioavailability between 10 mg amlodipine/100mg losartan compound amlodipine tablets as test and 10 mg amlodipine tablet as reference was assessed by calculating individual test/reference ratios for AUC0-t and pharmacokinetic profiles indicated bioequivalence since all ratios were as proposed by FDA. According to the validation parameters, it concluded that the developed method could be useful for amldoipine bioequivalent studies and routine therapeutic drug monitoring with desired precision and accuracy, and this study may be extended to determine the pharmacokinetics of amlodipine in patients and also to examine the drug-food or drug-drug interaction in combination therapy.
This study was conducted as a part of the projects (2012ZX09303-016-003) supported by the Major National Science and Technology Project, People Republic of China.