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Development and Validation of Quantitative UPLCMS/MS Assay for Anticoagulant Rodenticides in Liver Lori L. Smith, Boying Liang, Marcia C. Booth, Michael Filigenzi, Andriy Tkachenko, and Cynthia L. Gaskill J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.7b02280 • Publication Date (Web): 12 Jul 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on July 12, 2017
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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
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Development and Validation of Quantitative UPLC-MS/MS Assay for
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Anticoagulant Rodenticides in Liver
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Lori L. Smith*†, Boying Liang‡, Marcia C. Booth§, Michael S. Filigenzi§, Andriy Tkachenko┴
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and Cynthia L. Gaskill†
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University of Kentucky Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory, Toxicology Laboratory, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40511, United States
8 §
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University of California, Davis, California 95616, United States
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California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory System, Toxicology Laboratory,
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U.S. Food & Drug Administration, Center for Veterinary Medicine, 8401 Muirkirk Rd, Laurel, Maryland 20708, United States
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*Corresponding Author: Phone: (859) 257-8283; Fax: (859) 255-1624;
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Email:
[email protected] 16
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‡
Present Address: Medical Products Research and Development, Baxter Healthcare Co., Ltd., Suzhou 215028, People’s Republic of China ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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ABSTRACT:
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Anticoagulant rodenticides (ARs) are used to control rodent populations, however exposure to
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non-target animals occurs.
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optimized and validated for eight ARs in liver. Target analytes comprised two chemical classes:
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hydroxycoumarins (warfarin, coumachlor, dicoumarol, bromadiolone, brodifacoum and
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difethialone) and indanediones (diphacinone and chlorophacinone). In this method, liver extracts
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were cleaned up using dispersive solid phase extraction (d-SPE) to remove matrix interferences
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and analyzed by reverse phase ultra-performance liquid chromatography-tandem mass
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spectrometry (UPLC-MS/MS). Electrospray ionization in negative ion mode, combined with
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multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) using a triple quadrupole mass spectrometer, provided
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simultaneous confirmation and quantitation. Detection limits spanned 0.75 to 25 ng/g and lower
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quantitation limits were established as 50 ng/g. Inter-assay method accuracy ranged from 92-
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110% across the analytical range (50-2500 ng/g) using matrix-matched calibrants, with good
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repeatability (RSDs 2-16%).
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Orbitrap mass analyzer, providing high mass accuracy, was assessed by good method
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reproducibility during blinded study analyses (6-29%; Horwitz ratios (HORRAT) < 1.5).
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KEYWORDS:
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indanediones, dispersive SPE
A sensitive and rugged quantitative method was developed,
Successful method transfer to another laboratory utilizing an
rodenticides, electrospray, UPLC-MS/MS, poisoning, hydroxycoumarins,
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INTRODUCTION:
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Anticoagulant rodenticides (ARs) are pesticides used to control rodent populations, acting as
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vitamin K antagonists by inhibiting vitamin K epoxide reductase.1, 2 Consequently, formation of
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prothrombin and related blood-clotting factors (VII, IX and X) is blocked, causing massive
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hemorrhage and mortality. Commercially available in feed formulations as bait packs, pellets,
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bars and other products, ARs have been in use since the early 1950s in agricultural, urban and
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suburban settings and credited with revolutionizing vertebrate pest control.3 As a direct result of
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this popularity, a number of accidental poisonings of non-target species (i.e. wildlife, domestic
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farm animals and pets) have been reported.4-8 First generation ARs (FGARs; e.g. warfarin and
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coumachlor) were synthesized based on the hydroxycoumarin chemical structure for naturally
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occurring dicoumarol (see Figure 1), first discovered in improperly cured sweet clover.9-11
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FGARs generally have shorter elimination half-lives and require multiple feeds at higher doses
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to cause rodent death; their use eventually led to genetic resistance in rats and house mice.
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Second generation ARs, referred to as “superwarfarin” or long-acting ARs (SGARs; e.g.
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brodifacoum, difethialone, and bromadiolone), were developed to overcome resistance and are
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more potent than FGARs, often requiring only a single dose to induce death. Indanedione
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derivatives, notably chlorophacinone and diphacinone, are also considered to be SGARs in
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function and potency, but differ by the core chemical structure (see Figure 1).
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Multi-residue analytical methods have been developed for qualitative and quantitative
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determination of ARs in biological specimens to confirm exposure in post-mortem cases. A
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comprehensive review article has been recently published in which several analytical methods
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for ARs are summarized.12 Most methods currently in use rely on liquid chromatography (LC)
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due to the complexity of the prepared sample and the non-volatile nature of the AR analytes.12
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Coupling LC systems to either fluorescence or UV detectors is common and allows detection and
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quantitation of these analytes. Unfortunately, AR methods based on fluorescence spectroscopy
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are limited to hydroxycoumarin-based ARs while analysis of indanedione ARs requires
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additional instrumentation to detect absorption of UV radiation. Increasingly, reported methods
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incorporate the use of mass spectrometry (MS)-based detection schemes, primarily using
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electrospray ionization to produce negatively charged ions and monitoring production of unique
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fragment ions for each AR.13-18 Enhanced selectivity and sensitivity, as well as detection of
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multiple ARs in a single analysis, are primary advantages for using MS-based detection.
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Extensive sample clean-up techniques are often required to minimize matrix effects and
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suppress elevated baseline noise due to co-extracted interferences. Sample clean-up techniques
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for biological tissue extracts often rely on solid phase extraction (SPE) strategies, in which
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column conditioning, washing, sample elution and evaporative reconstitution steps are
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employed. While SPE methods can produce relatively clean chromatograms, the cartridges are
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susceptible to clogging and there are factors that must be thoroughly characterized for the
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technique to be robust (i.e. control of temperature, flow rate, pH, solvent compatibility, and
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matrix variations).19 Dispersive SPE (d-SPE) is a sample clean-up technique first introduced in
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2003 for pesticide analyses in fruits and vegetables20 in which matrix interferences in the sample
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extract adsorb onto solid sorbent materials. Analytes of interest remain in the liquid phase that
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may be subsequently filtered and directly analyzed, providing the advantages of decreased
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sample preparation time in a single step, decreased solvent use and an easily reproducible
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process. The successful use of d-SPE sample clean-up in conjunction with HPLC-fluorescence
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and UV detection schemes for AR analysis in biological specimens has been previously
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reported.21
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The aim of this research was to develop and validate a multi-residue quantitative method
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for hydroxycoumarin- and indanedione-based ARs in liver, using ultra-high performance liquid
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chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (UPLC-MS/MS) in combination with d-SPE sample
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clean-up. The developed method was extensively validated in a multi-laboratory collaborative
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study to address several limitations of previously published methods adopted by the diagnostic
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community with varying degrees of success. Many methods have been designed for use in a
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single laboratory, using a single instrument platform with conditions optimized for a limited set
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of ARs in a matrix, often narrowed to a single source species. The result is a wide body of
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published methods developed and validated for research studies primarily focused on academic
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endeavors, which may not extend beyond their envisioned application. Successful adoption of
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methods for routine use in diagnostic settings requires compatibility with samples from various
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source species, use on a range of instrument platforms, and detection limits compatible with
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toxicologically relevant AR concentrations. The developed method met these requirements and
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was confirmed to be suitably rugged through extensive validation, producing consistent
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analytical results in blinded studies when successfully transferred to a collaborating laboratory.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS:
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Chemicals and Materials. Coumachlor and dicoumarol standard reference materials were
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purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, MO).
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bromadiolone, brodifacoum and difethialone standard reference materials were provided by the
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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency National Pesticide Standard Repository (Fort Meade,
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MD). HPLC-grade methanol, acetonitrile, acetone, chloroform and ammonium acetate were
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obtained from Fisher Scientific (Pittsburgh, PA). Distilled, deionized water was produced in-
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Warfarin, diphacinone, chlorophacinone,
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house using a Barnstead MEGA-PURE 6A water distillation unit (Barnstead-Thermolyne,
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Dubuque, IA) and a Barnstead EASYpure II RF water purification system (Thermo Scientific,
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Dubuque, IA). Dispersive SPE tubes, each containing 175 mg magnesium sulfate, 100 mg
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florisil, 50 mg alumina basic and 50 mg primary secondary amine (PSA), were custom-ordered
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from United Chemical Technologies, Inc. (Bristol, PA).
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Calibration Standards. Equine liver was obtained from animals submitted to the University of
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Kentucky Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory for necropsy, homogenized in bulk by mechanical
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blending, tested to ensure no detectable ARs were present and stored at -20°C until use.
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Calibration curves comprised of seven, non-zero points for AR quantitation were prepared by
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fortifying control liver at increasing concentrations and processing them as unknown samples
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(i.e. matrix-matched calibrants). These calibrants were prepared at 25, 50, 75, 100, 500, 1000
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and 2500 ng/g by adding the appropriate volume of a standard reference solution containing a
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mixture of ARs (10 µg/mL each) directly onto the control liver and vortex-mixing. Quality
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control samples were prepared at three concentration levels: blank (no ARs added), low (50
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ng/g) and high (1000 ng/g).
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concurrently with each analytical batch.
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Sample Extraction and d-SPE Clean-Up. One gram of liver was weighed into a 50-mL
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disposable centrifuge tube. Six milliliters of 10% (v/v) methanol in acetonitrile and a 9.5-mm
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stainless steel grinding ball was added to the tube and vortexed. The sample was homogenized
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for 5 min at 650 rpm using an impact grinder (2010 Geno/Grinder, SPEX SamplePrep,
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Metuchen, NJ). A second homogenization cycle was repeated as needed to achieve thorough
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sample consistency. Sample extraction occurred by agitating the homogenates horizontally on a
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reciprocating shaker table for 30 minutes, followed by centrifugation at 829g for 5 min.
Calibrants and control samples were prepared and analyzed
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The extract supernatant was then transferred to a d-SPE tube and vortex mixed for 10 s to
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completely wet the SPE sorbents. Sample extracts were then placed on a tube rotator at 30 rpm
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for 30 min, followed by centrifugation at 829g for 5 min.
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The cleaned extract supernatant was transferred to an empty 15-mL disposable centrifuge
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tube and evaporated to dryness under nitrogen at 45°C (XcelVap evaporation system; Horizon
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Technology, Salem, NH). The dried residue was reconstituted in 1 mL methanol, sonicated
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briefly to aid complete dissolution (up to 5 min, depending on sample characteristics) and
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filtered through a 0.22 µm PTFE syringe filter (MicroSolv Technologies, Eatontown, NJ)
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directly into a silanized, amber autosampler vial for UPLC-MS/MS analysis.
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UPLC-MS/MS Analysis. All reported analyses from the method-originating laboratory were
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performed on a Thermo Scientific Dionex UltiMate 3000 ultra-performance liquid
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chromatography (UPLC) system comprised of a solvent organizer, temperature-controlled
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autosampler, binary gradient pump, and temperature-controlled column compartment.
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eluate from the UPLC system was introduced by direct coupling to a Thermo Scientific TSQ
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Quantum Access Max triple quadrupole mass spectrometer (Waltham, MA) with a heated
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electrospray ionization (HESI-II) source operated in negative ion mode.
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separation was carried out at 25ºC using an Accucore C18 LC analytical column (2.1 mm i.d. ×
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100 mm; 2.6 µm) preceded by a guard column of the same material (2.1 mm i.d. x 10 mm;
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Thermo Scientific, Waltham, MA). Mobile phase was delivered at a constant flowrate of 0.300
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mL/min. The binary mobile phase consisted of 10 mM ammonium acetate, pH 9 (mobile phase
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A) and methanol (mobile phase B), each of which was degassed by vacuum filtration through
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0.22 µm PTFE membrane filters prior to use. Extracts from matrix-matched calibrants, control
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and unknown samples were injected (1 µL) into the initial gradient conditions of 60% mobile
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phase A / 40% mobile phase B, which were maintained for 1 min following injection. Mobile
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phase B was increased linearly to 57% over the next 8 min and increased further to 77% over the
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next 6 min. From 15 to 18 min post-injection, mobile phase B was increased to 81% and finally
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to 90% in one minute. Mobile phase B was held at 90% for 5 min to rinse the column of any
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residual non-polar matrix components and minimize carryover. At 24 min post-injection, the
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initial mobile phase conditions were resumed to allow re-equilibration of the column in
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preparation for the next analysis. The total run time for one injection was 34 min, with all target
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ARs eluting within the first 18 min.
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Chromatograms produced by multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) of specific
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fragmentation pathways for deprotonated molecular ions ([M-H+]-) were used for confirmation
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and quantitation of the target ARs. The mass spectrometer was tuned and calibrated in negative
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ion mode using its automated tuning procedure and the corresponding tuning solution (Thermo
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Scientific), a mixture of polytyrosines. Tune parameters were further refined by direct infusion
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of a methanolic mixture of ARs (approximately 10 µg/mL each) into the UPLC eluate flow at
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initial gradient conditions (60% mobile phase A / 40% mobile phase B; 0.300 mL/min; 25ºC).
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Source vaporizer and capillary temperatures were set to 380ºC and 300ºC, respectively, with an
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ESI spray voltage at 4000 V. Sheath, auxillary, and ion sweep gases were set at 50, 45, and 0
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(arbitrary units), respectively, sourced from either compressed ultra-high purity (UHP) nitrogen
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or a nitrogen generator (NitroFlowLab; Parker Balston, Haverhill, MA). The collision-induced
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dissociation gas (UHP argon) was maintained at a constant pressure of 1.7 mTorr in the collision
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cell throughout analysis. Multiple scan channels were acquired simultaneously, corresponding to
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each of the monitored fragmentation transitions established for either confirmation or
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quantitation of the target ARs within 2 min of the expected retention time (see Table 1). Tube
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lens offset potentials and collision energies for individual fragmentation transitions were
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optimized for maximum sensitivity and are listed in Table 1 as well.
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Data Analysis.
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Qualitative Assessment. The respective AR was positively identified in the unknown sample if
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the following criteria were met: i). The quantifying ion and the corresponding confirming ion
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co-eluted within 0.1 min of one another, each with a signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) > 3, ii). The
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retention times of the quantifying and confirming ions were within 0.25 min of the mean
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retention time for the corresponding AR in all calibrants and overspiked control samples
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acquired within the same analysis batch, and iii). The ratio of signals for the quantifying and
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confirming ions (ion ratio) was consistent with those observed in the calibrants acquired
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concurrently (e.g. within 20% of the average ion ratio).
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Quantitation. Quantitative results for method recovery experiments were determined using
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external calibration unless otherwise stated. Chromatographic peak area for the quantifying ion
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transition was plotted versus concentration of the corresponding AR for a set of matrix-matched
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calibrants, carried through the extraction and d-SPE clean-up steps.
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concentrations were interpolated from the resulting calibration curves.
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Analyte Stability. Stability of ARs in liver was investigated by analyzing control liver spiked
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at either low or high levels (50 and 2000 ng/g) after storage in various environments. The
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prepared liver was held in three different storage conditions (benchtop at ambient temperature,
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refrigerated storage at 4°C, and freezer storage at -20°C) over varied lengths of time. Benchtop
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storage was investigated over four days, refrigerated storage was investigated for one week and
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freezer storage continued for up to one month. Results were compared to initial values obtained
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immediately after control liver was fortified (Day 0, no storage).
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Method Validation. Validation of method performance was carried out according to U.S. FDA
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Office of Foods and Veterinary Medicine guidelines22, but adapted to non-food diagnostic
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matrices. Validation comprised four stages. First, determination of the following performance
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characteristics was performed using fortified liver in the method-originating laboratory:
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selectivity, limits of detection and quantitation, detector response characteristics, accuracy and
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precision (i.e. repeatability (RSDr)). Additionally, matrix effects and any potential analyte losses
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from sample preparation were assessed.
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originating laboratory analyzed samples during a blinded study organized by an independent
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laboratory. Analysts remained blinded to AR concentrations, number of spike levels, number of
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replicates at each level and any additional challenges scheduled by the organizers. The method
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was then transferred to a collaborating laboratory and original method performance
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characteristics (i.e. sensitivity, accuracy and precision) were verified. In the final validation
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stage, inter-laboratory reproducibility (RSDR) and ruggedness/robustness were assessed by
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concurrent analysis of blinded samples (also prepared at the independent laboratory) at both the
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method-originating and collaborating laboratories.
During the second validation stage, the method-
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Signal intensity changes (i.e. suppression or enhancement) based on the influence of
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residual matrix in processed sample extracts on ionization efficiency were studied. Subsamples
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of blank control liver were processed as unknown samples (i.e. extracted and submitted to d-SPE
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clean-up). Sufficient volumes of AR standard solution (10 µg/mL) were then added to these
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prepared blank extracts to mimic complete recovery of 50, 500 and 2000 ng/g. Matrix effects
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were determined by comparing mean peak areas of ARs prepared in extracted control liver
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samples to those prepared in neat solvent (i.e. methanol), expressed as a percentage. This
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determination was made over three days for four replicates at each concentration level.
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The extent to which AR loss may have occurred during sample preparation was
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evaluated, combining extraction and d-SPE clean-up recovery. An appropriate volume of AR
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standard solution (10 µg/mL) was added to blank control liver to achieve 50, 500 or 2000 ng/g
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prior to treatment as an unknown sample (“Pre-Process Spike”). For comparison, blank control
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liver was extracted and submitted to d-SPE clean-up first, followed by enrichment at the same
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concentrations (“Post-Process Spike”).
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quantifying ion transition for each AR in the Pre-Process Spike was normalized relative to the
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corresponding Post-Process Spike, expressed as a percentage. The recovery percentages for
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sample preparation were determined in this manner over three days for a total of three replicates
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at each concentration level.
The integrated chromatographic peak area of the
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Method accuracy and inter-assay precision (i.e. repeatability within a single laboratory)
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were determined by analyzing fortified control liver at five levels (e.g. 25, 50, 500, 1000 and
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2000 ng/g) against matrix-matched calibrants across multiple days (n = 3 or 5, depending on
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spike level).
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Blinded samples were prepared with control liver spiked with ARs by an independent
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laboratory and submitted to the method-originating laboratory for analysis to further evaluate
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method performance. Scheduled challenges to the validated method were incorporated into the
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blinded sample set and included introduction of another source species (i.e. porcine) and the liver
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was treated more rigorously prior to fortification in an attempt to induce cell lysis (i.e. additional
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homogenization after mechanical blending, followed by sonication and repeated freeze/thaw
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cycles).
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Following completion of the blinded study, the method was transferred to and verified by
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an external collaborating laboratory, allowing assessment of method reproducibility and
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ruggedness/robustness.
Method implementation was performed with a Thermo Scientific
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QExactive MS system equipped with a Dionex Ultimate 3000 UPLC.
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monitoring (PRM) was used for detection of all panel analytes. All chromatographic and ion
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source parameters were consistent with the previous descriptions. Mass spectrometer settings for
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the PRM scans included mass resolution (FWHM at m/z 200) of 17,500, AGC target of 2x105,
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maximum injection time of 50 msec and an isolation window of 4.0 u.
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corresponding fragment ions, as well as normalized collision energies (NCE) are listed in Table
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1.
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precursor ions. Therefore, evaluation of full scan spectra rather than product ion ratios was used
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for analyte identification.
Parallel reaction
Precursor and
PRM scanning provides full scan high resolution data from fragmentation of selected
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Blinded duplicate sample sets (n=11 per set) were prepared by an independent laboratory
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with control liver at various concentrations and submitted to both laboratories for concurrent
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analyses. Pretreatment of liver tissue to induce cell lysis, as described for the single-laboratory
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blinded method performance test, remained a scheduled challenge for this event as well. Horwitz
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ratios (HORRAT)23 were used as a tool to assess method reproducibility and were calculated
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using Eq. 1: HORRAT = %RSDR / %PRSDR
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Eq. 1
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where %RSDR is the reproducibility precision of the pooled results from the participating
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laboratories. The predicted relative reproducibility precision (%PRSDR) was calculated using
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Eq. 2:
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%PRSDR = 2C-0.1505 where C is the known spike level concentration expressed on a g/g basis.
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RESULTS AND DISCUSSION:
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Tandem mass spectrometry generally provides highly selective detection with good sensitivity
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due to very low background noise and is ideally suited for multi-residue assays in complex
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biological matrices.24
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fragmentation of deprotonated molecular ions of the target analytes, it is possible to easily
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discern signals of interest from potential matrix interferences (i.e. chemical noise). Incorporating
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chromatographic separation prior to MS/MS analysis provides an additional level of selectivity
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in the form of unique retention times for each analyte. The monitored product ion transitions for
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each AR included in the panel were selected by characterizing the fragmentation patterns of the
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corresponding deprotonated molecular ion in the absence of matrix. As a consequence of
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chemical structure similarity, the quantifying ion transitions for deprotonated warfarin (m/z 307)
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and dicoumarol (m/z 335), as well as the confirming ion transition for deprotonated coumachlor
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(m/z 341), depend on the same product ion, m/z 161 (see Table 1 and Figure 2B-C). However,
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exclusive retention times and precursor ion masses provide enough information to uniquely
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distinguish each AR during a single analysis.
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transitions were defined for individual ARs, blank equine liver extracts were prepared as
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unknowns and analyzed by UPLC-MS/MS. The resultant MRM chromatograms yielded no
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detectable signals above baseline noise for the combined quantifying and confirming ion
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transitions selected for each AR (see Figure 2A; note the vertical scale is approximately 2 orders
287
of magnitude lower than shown in Figure 2B-C). Results were similarly negative for blank liver
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from other sources as well, including bovine, canine, feline and avian species, indicating high
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detection selectivity for the target ARs included in this method. Method selectivity was further
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verified by investigating the rate of false positive results in a blinded collaborative study for
By monitoring unique product ion transitions that arise from
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Once the quantifying and confirming ion
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spiked test samples in which a single AR was omitted. Co-occurrence of multiple ARs extracted
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from a single sample is unlikely to cause interferences or produce false positive results.
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Instrument Response Characteristics.
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quantitation (LOQs) were estimated (data not shown) from replicate injections of serially diluted
295
AR standards in methanol (n = 3 for LODs, n = 6 for LOQs). Instrument LODs were set at the
296
lowest level for which confirming ions were detected with a signal-to-noise ratio greater than 3,
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within 0.25 min of expected retention times. Instrument LOQs were set at the lowest level for
298
which acceptable variance (+/- 20%) from the known concentration was routinely achieved.
299
Method quantitation limits (MQLs) were verified by assessing the accuracy and precision of
300
method recovery for control liver spiked at levels near the instrument LOQs (+/- 20%).
Instrument
limits
of
detection
(LODs)
and
301
Detection limits ranged from 0.75 to 25 ng/g, depending upon AR, while MQLs were
302
established uniformly at 50 ng/g based on accuracy requirements for method recovery, rather
303
than low signal-to-noise ratios (see Figure 2B-C). Instrument response was determined by
304
producing multiple calibration curves from 7 matrix-matched calibrants over the course of
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several days. A direct proportionality to concentration for all ARs in the range of 25 to 2500
306
ng/g was established, in which a coefficient of correlation ((R2; weighted 1/x2) greater than or
307
equal to 0.985 was considered acceptable. Instrument response at AR concentrations greater
308
than 2500 ng/g exhibited non-linearity (i.e. quadratic). There are many proposed hypotheses to
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attempt explanation of non-linear relationships between ESI-MS instrument response and
310
concentration; however they are generally beyond the scope of this work.25 The upper limit of
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quantitation (ULOQ) is generally of less consequence than method sensitivity, provided the
312
practical requirements of the method are met. A sample extract that induces an instrument
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response exceeding the ULOQ is immediately indicative of AR exposure at substantial amounts
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and may be diluted with solvent for re-analysis if an accurate quantitative result is desired.
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From a practical perspective, the analytical concentration range over which this method
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was established is appropriate for the intended purpose. Threshold levels of concern are difficult
317
to establish due to a variety of confounding factors. Expected AR concentrations in liver
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samples from natural exposure are dependent on the initial dosage and the time elapsed between
319
exposure and either death of the animal or sample collection from a live animal. ARs are
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metabolized and excreted over time, with excretion half-lives varying depending on both the
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compound and the species exposed.26 Wildlife studies have shown animals with low dose,
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secondary exposures to ARs through predation (e.g. barn owls consuming rodents) can develop
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low detectable concentrations in tissues, yet show no evidence of coagulopathy.27, 28 Conversely,
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an animal with direct AR exposure living for an extended period of time (i.e. up to weeks after
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the initial encounter) can also have very low concentrations of ARs remaining in the liver at the
326
time of eventual death. Therefore, it is difficult to establish reliable threshold levels for ARs in
327
tissue to distinguish intoxication from coincidental exposure background levels. Furthermore,
328
threshold levels for these ARs in liver may remain ambiguous in published literature due to
329
possible method inconsistencies between laboratories as there are currently no formal
330
proficiency testing programs for ARs in liver. As such, diagnoses of AR poisoning require a
331
combination of clinical findings consistent with coagulopathy and detection of ARs in liver.
332
A common feature of ESI-based analyses is susceptibility to signal suppression and/or
333
enhancement in the presence of matrix, especially when the sample originates from a complex
334
system (e.g. tissue extract). The degree to which formation of deprotonated molecular ions and
335
corresponding quantifying and confirming ions of the reported ARs was affected by the presence
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of matrix co-extractants was determined. Percent matrix effects were calculated by comparing
337
chromatographic peak areas for each AR in the presence of residual matrix to solvent-based
338
standard solutions. There were no appreciable changes to detected signals for any of the ARs, at
339
any concentration tested, as noted by percent matrix effects ranging from 90-121% (see Table 2).
340
Typically, percent matrix effects are of concern when the variation exceeds 20%.29
341
General sample preparation techniques like dispersive solid phase extraction (d-SPE) are
342
principally based on non-specific interactions between adsorbents and mixture components. For
343
broad-spectrum applications like multi-residue analyses, d-SPE provides quick and simple means
344
to reduce potential matrix interferences in complex mixtures (i.e. tissue extracts). However,
345
there is potential for target analytes to interact with sorbent materials, adversely affecting
346
recovery. The extent to which AR recovery was impacted by d-SPE clean-up was investigated
347
by comparing mean chromatographic peak areas for control liver spiked with ARs before sample
348
extraction and clean-up, to blank control liver extract in which ARs were added after sample
349
preparation. Recoveries, with respect to sample preparation, ranged from 51-72% for all ARs
350
across the analytical range (see Table 2); the degree of AR loss was independent of both AR
351
chemical structure and concentration under the validated experimental conditions. However, AR
352
recovery was inconsistent and poor (approximately 10%-20% for non-polar ARs) during
353
preliminary recovery studies in which ARs were diluted with pure extraction solvent to mimic a
354
matrix-free extract. This strongly indicates AR recovery from d-SPE clean-up is dependent on
355
the presence of matrix in the extract solution. Should the validated method ever be extended to
356
another sample type (i.e. bait, stomach contents, etc.), there are aspects of the d-SPE clean-up
357
procedure that need to be optimized and validated.
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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Two critical parameters were identified to achieve uniform AR recovery from liver
359
extracts:
i). duration of interaction between d-SPE sorbents and sample extracts and ii).
360
exclusion of C18 sorbent material as a clean-up component. Frequently, d-SPE is promoted as a
361
quick sample clean-up procedure in which extracts are vortex-mixed in the presence of sorbent
362
materials for seconds or a few minutes, prior to separating solid sorbent material from extract
363
solution by centrifugation. Previously published literature for AR quantitation in liver by HPLC
364
with fluorescence and UV detection21 recommended the use of the following d-SPE components
365
for sample clean-up: 50 mg PSA, 100 mg florisil, 175 mg magnesium sulfate, 50 mg basic
366
alumina and 50 mg C18 sorbent.
367
extract/sorbents mixture for 15 s, allowing it to rest for 5 min, followed by centrifugation at 1400
368
rpm for 8 min.
369
recoveries. Less polar ARs (i.e. later-eluting) suffered primarily and were recovered at rates
370
ranging from 25% to 45%.
371
improved recovery for chlorophacinone, bromadiolone, brodifacoum and difethialone by 12% to
372
18%. An additional 18% to 27% gain for these same four ARs was achieved by extending the
373
length of time the sample extract interacted with the sorbents from 9 min (1 min vortex-mix plus
374
8 min centrifugation) to 30 min. Interestingly, diphacinone recovery was low (40%) at short
375
clean-up durations whether or not C18 was included in the sorbent mixture. Instead, diphacinone
376
recovery was increased by approximately 28% solely based on extending the clean-up interaction
377
time to 30 min. All ARs more polar than diphacinone (i.e. expected retention times 7.5 min and
378
earlier) were unaffected by C18 and the duration of exposure to d-SPE sorbents. Calibration
379
curves generated from matrix-matched calibrants that have experienced sample preparation steps
380
(i.e. d-SPE clean-up) are required to accomplish accurate AR quantitation to account for known
The referenced method describes vortex-mixing the
Using similar parameters for sample clean-up produced inconsistent AR
Omission of C18 sorbent from the d-SPE component mixture
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381
analyte loss. Despite losing an appreciable amount of analyte in sample clean-up, d-SPE remains
382
an attractive matrix removal procedure due to low technical difficulty in implementation and
383
uniform recovery across ARs once optimized.
384
Method Accuracy and Precision. Analysis of spiked control liver at four concentration levels
385
(50, 500, 1000 and 2000 ng/g) against matrix-matched calibrants revealed inter-assay accuracy
386
was 92-110% with corresponding precision ranging from 2-16% (see Table 3). A fifth spike
387
level (25 ng/g) was analyzed concurrently to verify method quantitation limits set at 50 ng/g;
388
accuracy ranged from 63-88% and precision ranged from 7-22%. Results clearly demonstrated
389
that the method is adequately accurate and precise for a multi-residue quantitative assay, based
390
on criteria that method accuracy and RSD at each concentration level is within ± 20%.
391
Furthermore, accuracy and intra-assay precision were assessed by analysis of blinded overspiked
392
liver samples prepared by an independent laboratory. Method results were concluded to be
393
accurate and precise within the same analytical batch regardless of liver source species (i.e.
394
equine versus porcine), low concentration spike level (50 ng/g) and rigorous sample pretreatment
395
to induce cell lyses (see Table 4).
396
Stability. Comparison of means across days was performed using one-way ANOVA at a 95%
397
confidence interval for spiked control liver placed in various storage conditions. There was no
398
significant difference between time points at each storage condition for either low or high
399
concentrations in liver for the following ARs:
400
dicoumarol, difethialone and diphacinone.
401
difference at high concentrations for the investigated storage conditions for bromadiolone.
402
Likewise, there was no statistically significant difference noted for warfarin at low concentration.
brodifacoum, chlorophacinone, coumachlor,
Further, there was no statistically significant
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403
Liver containing low AR concentrations (e.g. 50 ng/g) can be easily distinguished from
404
liver containing high AR concentrations (e.g 2000 ng/g) at all storage conditions and time points
405
investigated. Further, liver with low concentrations near the method quantitation limit can be
406
reliably analyzed for up to one month when stored frozen (-20°C) or up to one week when
407
refrigerated (4°C). For clinical diagnostic purposes, exposure to these ARs can be determined
408
with a sufficient degree of certainty.
409
Further, prepared calibrant and sample extract solutions were determined to be stable
410
overnight at ambient temperatures. During the blinded method performance study, an unplanned
411
suspension of the analytical batch necessitated restarting the analysis the following morning. All
412
calibrants, controls and blinded sample extract solutions had been stored on the autosampler tray
413
overnight prior to a successful and complete analysis. The final results obtained for the blinded
414
samples were comparable to the overspiked control samples prepared on the day of analysis in an
415
unblinded manner (Sample Types 1, 2, 4 and 5 versus Sample Type 3 in Table 4).
416
Blinded Collaborative Study. Method performance demonstrated in the multiple-laboratory
417
blinded study met validation guidelines for a quantitative method and verified the method was
418
suitable for the intended purposes. There was a 0% false positive rate at both laboratories for the
419
blinded samples in which analytes were intentionally omitted, indicating high selectivity for ARs
420
in liver. Furthermore, Horwitz ratios (HORRAT) were less than or equal to 1.5, an indication
421
quantitative results for a matched sample set from two different laboratories were in good
422
agreement based on method reproducibility (see Table 5). Moreover, method performance
423
remained unaffected by inter-laboratory variations including different analysts, sources of
424
reagents and types of instrumentation (e.g. centrifuges, MS instrumentation, etc.), confirming the
425
method is rugged.
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426
Routine Use of Method. Since completion of the validation, one of the two laboratories has
427
employed this method for the analysis of over 1000 liver tissue samples submitted from various
428
sources. The method has proven to be efficient and rugged, consistently meeting quality control
429
requirements (e.g. coefficients of determination (r2 > 0.99), overspike recoveries within 80 –
430
120%). Naturally incurred AR residues were detected and quantified in many of the submitted
431
samples.
Page 20 of 33
432
In summary, based on data obtained during all four stages of validation including (i) in-
433
house method validation in method-originating laboratory, (ii) single laboratory blinded study,
434
(iii) method verification in collaborating laboratory, and (iv) multiple laboratory blinded study,
435
as well as analysis of actual diagnostic samples in the collaborating laboratory, the method was
436
concluded to be reproducible and rugged to quantify ARs in liver samples. Such extensive
437
method validation provides a high degree of confidence the method will perform as described if
438
adopted by other laboratories for routine analysis of diagnostic samples.
439 440
ABBREVIATIONS:
441
AGC, ARs, d-SPE, (-)ESI, FGARs, FWHM, HORRAT, NCE, PRM, %PRSDR, % RSDR,
442
SGARs, UHP, ULOQ, UPLC-MS/MS
443 444
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT:
445
The authors acknowledge valuable input from Dr. Renate Reimschuessel and Ms. Sarah Nemser
446
from the Veterinary Laboratory Investigation and Response Network (Vet-LIRN), Center for
447
Veterinary Medicine, U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
448
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FUNDING:
450
This study was funded (FOA PA-13-244) and performed in collaboration with the U.S. Food and
451
Drug Administration’s Veterinary Laboratory Investigation and Response Network (FDA Vet-
452
LIRN) under Grant No. 1U18FD005015.
453 454
DISCLAIMER:
455
The views expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the
456
official policy of the Department of Health and Human Services, the U.S. Food and Drug
457
Administration, or the U.S. Government.
458 459
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460
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461
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462
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Metabolism and Drug Interactions 1987, 5, 225-271.
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Vitamin K, Litwack, G., Ed. Elsevier Academic Press Inc: San Diego, 2008; Vol. 78, pp 103-130.
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Poppenga, R.; Crooks, K. R.; Wayne, R. K.; Riley, S. P. D., Anticoagulant rodenticides in urban
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bobcats: exposure, risk factors and potential effects based on a 16-year study. Ecotoxicology
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2015, 24, 844-862.
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Disease. V. Identification and Synthesis of the Hemorrhagic Agent. Journal of Biological
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Chemistry 1941, 138, 513-527.
Sutcliffe, F. A.; MacNicoll, A. D.; Gibson, G. G., Aspects of Anticoagulant Action: A
Tie, J. K.; Stafford, D. W., Structure and function of vitamin K epoxide reductase. In Rattner, B. A.; Lazarus, R. S.; Elliott, J. E.; Shore, R. F.; van den Brink, N., Adverse
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Ruder, M. G.; Poppenga, R. H.; Bryan, J. A.; Bain, M.; Pitman, J.; Keel, M. K.,
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Stansley, W.; Cummings, M.; Vudathala, D.; Murphy, L. A., Anticoagulant Rodenticides
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Overman, R. S.; Stahmann, M. A.; Huebner, C. F.; Sullivan, W. R.; Spero, L.; Doherty,
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D. G.; Ikawa, M.; Graf, L.; Roseman, S.; Link, K. P., Studies on the Hemorrhagic Sweet Clover
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Disease. XIII. Anticoagulant Activity and Structure in the 4-Hydroxycoumarin Group. Journal of
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for determination of anticoagulant rodenticides in biological samples. Forensic Sci.Int. 2015,
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anticoagulant rodenticides in tissues by column-switching UHPLC-ESI-MS/MS. Anal. Bioanal.
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Chem. 2007, 55, 571-576.
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Chromatography-Tandem Mass Spectrometry Ion-Trap Technique for the Simultaneous
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Determination of Thirteen Anticoagulant Rodenticides, Drugs, or Natural Products. J. Anal.
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Toxicol. 2010, 34, 95-102.
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eight anticoagulant rodenticides in animal plasma and liver using liquid chromatography
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combined with heated electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry. J. Chromatogr. B
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2008, 869, 101-110.
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quantification of second generation anticoagulant rodenticides diastereoisomers in rat liver in
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relationship with exposure of wild rats. J. Chromatogr. B 2017, 1041, 120-132.
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Analysis of anticoagulant rodenticide residues in Microtus arvalis tissues by liquid
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chromatography with diode array, fluorescence and mass spectrometry detection. J. Chromatogr.
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Milford, MA, 2012.
Imran, M.; Shafi, H.; Wattoo, S. A.; Chaudhary, M. T.; Usman, H. F., Analytical methods
Marsalek, P.; Modra, H.; Doubkova, V.; Vecerek, V., Simultaneous determination of ten
Marek, L. J.; Koskinen, W. C., Multiresidue analysis of seven anticoagulant rodenticides
Fourel, I.; Hugnet, C.; Goy-Thollot, I.; Berny, P., Validation of a New liquid
Vandenbroucke, V.; Desmet, N.; De Backer, P.; Croubels, S., Multi-residue analysis of
Fourel, I.; Damin-Pernik, M.; Benoit, E.; Lattard, V., Core-shell LC-MS/MS method for
Hernandez, A. M.; Bernal, J.; Bernal, J. L.; Martin, M. T.; Caminero, C.; Nozal, M. J.,
Arsenault, J. C., Beginner's Guide to Solid-Phase Extraction. Waters Corporation:
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Anastassiades, M.; Lehotay, S. J.; Stajnbaher, D.; Schenck, F. J., Fast and easy
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multiresidue method employing acetonitrile extraction/partitioning and "dispersive solid-phase
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extraction" for the determination of pesticide residues in produce. J. AOAC Int. 2003, 86, 412-
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Rodenticides in Animal Blood and Liver Tissue Using Principles of QuEChERS Method. J.
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Anal. Toxicol. 2010, 34, 273-279.
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Guidelines for the FDA FVM Program, 2nd ed. In 2nd ed.; on-line, 2015.
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Mass Spectrometry Applications in Endocrinology. Mass Spectrometry Reviews 2010, 29, 480-
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of non-linearity in liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry bioanalytical assays and
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strategy to predict and extend the linear standard curve range. Rapid Commun. Mass Spectrom.
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2012, 26, 1465-1474.
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Mammals: A Comparative Approach. In U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, O. o. P.,
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Pesticides and Toxic Substances, Office of Pesticide Programs, Ed. U.S. Government Printing
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Office: Washington, DC, 2004.
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FOUR SPECIES OF BIRDS OF PREY PRESENTED TO A WILDLIFE CLINIC IN
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MASSACHUSETTS, 2006-2010. J. Zoo Wildl. Med. 2011, 42, 88-97.
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Anticoagulant exposure and notoedric mange in bobcats and mountain lions in urban southern
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California. Journal of Wildlife Management 2007, 71, 1874-1884.
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of matrix effect in quantitative bioanalytical methods based on HPLC-MS/MS. Anal. Chem.
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2003, 75, 3019-3030.
Vudathala, D.; Cummings, M.; Murphy, L., Analysis of Multiple Anticoagulant
US Food & Drug Administration, O. o. F. a. V. M., Chemical Method Validation McClure, F. D.; Lee, J. K., Computation of HORRAT values. J. AOAC Int. 2003, 86, Kushnir, M. M.; Rockwood, A. L.; Bergquist, B. J., Liquid Chromatography-Tandem
Yuan, L.; Zhang, D. X.; Jemal, M.; Aubry, A. F., Systematic evaluation of the root cause
Erickson, W.; Urban, D., Potential Risks of Nine Rodenticides to Birds and Nontarget
Murray, M., ANTICOAGULANT RODENTICIDE EXPOSURE AND TOXICOSIS IN
Riley, S. P. D.; Bromley, C.; Poppenga, R. H.; Uzal, F. A.; Whited, L.; Sauvajot, R. M.,
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30.
Lodal, J.; Hansen, O.C. Human and environmental exposure for rodenticides - Focus on
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the Nordic countries; Nordic Council of Ministers, TemaNord: Copenhagen, Denmark, 2002.
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31.
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Steric Constants, Washington, D.C.: American Chemical Society, 1995.
Hansch, C.; Leo, A.; Hoekman, D. Exploring QSAR - Hydrophobic, Electronic, and
555 556
FIGURE CAPTIONS:
557
Figure 1. Chemical structures for anticoagulant rodenticides
558
Figure 2. Typical MRM chromatograms of (I) warfarin, (II) coumachlor, (III) diphacinone, (IV)
559
dicoumarol, (V) chlorophacinone, (VI) bromadiolone, (VII) brodifacoum and (VIII) difethialone.
560
(A) Blank liver; (B) SRM of quantifying ion transition for liver spiked with ARs (25 ng/g); (C)
561
SRM of confirming ion transition for spiked liver. Note the vertical scale for (A) is
562
approximately 2 orders of magnitude lower than (B) and (C).
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Table 1. MS/MS acquisition parameters for eight anticoagulant rodenticides Thermo Scientific TSQ Quantum Access Max retention time
rodenticide warfarin
(min)
2.00
coumachlor
4.87
diphacinone
7.48
dicoumarol
7.68
chlorophacinone
11.08
bromadiolone
13.76
b
brodifacoum
16.28
difethialone
16.53
a b
precursor ion ((M-H+)-; u) a
307 307 341 341 339 339 335 335 373 373 525 525 521 521 537 537
Thermo Scientific Q Exactive
fragment ion
collision energy
tube lens
precursor ion
fragment ion
(u)
(eV)
(V)
((M-H+)-; u)
normalized collision energy
(u)
(NCE; eV)
161 250 284 161 167 165 161 117 201 145 250 273 135 143 151 371
22 25 26 23 28 48 21 47 24 25 38 40 40 57 41 35
70 70 71 71 77 77 47 47 76 76 97 97 101 101 100 100
307.098
161.024
30
341.059
161.024
30
339.103
167.086
35
335.055
161.024
50
373.064
201.047
30
525.071
250.063
40
521.076
78.918
40
537.053
78.918
35
Transitions in bold were used for quantitation Two isomers are present for bromadiolone; the earliest eluting (and most abundant) isomer was used for detection and quantitation.
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Table 2. Overview of AR recovery with respect to matrix effects and sample preparation (e.g. homogenization, liquid-solid extraction and d-SPE clean-up processing) matrix effectsa sample preparation recoveryb (mean ± SD; %) (mean ± SD; %) rodenticide 50 ng/g 500 ng/g 2000 ng/g 50 ng/g 500 ng/g 2000 ng/g warfarin 90 ± 17 90 ± 17 101 ± 9 63 ± 2 65 ± 3 65 ± 5 coumachlor 99 ± 5 98 ± 6 103 ± 8 65 ± 4 68 ± 2 72 ± 2 diphacinone 99 ± 7 100 ± 11 105 ± 7 51 ± 8 59 ± 1 65 ± 5 dicoumarol 99 ± 7 100 ± 11 105 ± 6 63 ± 9 65 ± 3 69 ± 2 chlorophacinone 92 ± 5 103 ± 7 120 ± 37 65 ± 5 59 ± 2 68 ± 2 bromadiolone 100 ± 26 110 ± 10 110 ± 35 70 ± 9 66 ± 4 70 ± 2 brodifacoum 90 ± 22 106 ± 4 121 ± 3 65 ± 7 66 ± 2 68 ± 9 difethialone 115 ± 8 107 ± 7 116 ± 7 61 ± 7 61 ± 3 63 ± 7 a b
n = 4 across 3 different days n = 3 across 3 different days
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Table 3. Inter-assay accuracy and precision of AR method at the methodoriginating laboratory
rodenticide warfarin coumachlor diphacinone dicoumarol chlorophacinone bromadiolone brodifacoum difethialone a b
25 ng/g 63 (11) 69 (13) 84 (7) 75 (8) 70 (10) 71 (13) 80 (9) 88 (22)
method accuracya,b (mean (RSDr); %) 50 500 1000 ng/g ng/g ng/g 106 (8) 104 (5) 103 (5) 104 (8) 104 (3) 99 (5) 104 (8) 96 (7) 102 (15) 104 (6) 98 (6) 98 (9) 102 (6) 100 (8) 105 (3) 110 (5) 98 (2) 100 (10) 104 (10) 96 (7) 107 (16) 100 (12) 92 (8) 98 (9)
2000 ng/g 105 (8) 108 (2) 106 (4) 107 (5) 100 (10) 99 (3) 105 (7) 105 (5)
n = 3 across 3 days for 25 and 1000 ng/g n = 5 across 5 days for 50, 500 and 2000 ng/g
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Table 4. Quantitative results obtained at the method-originating laboratory on blinded samples prepared by an independent laboratory rodenticide (mean ± SD; ng/g)c
sample type 1
source species Equine
sample pretreatmenta untreated
spike levelb (ng/g) 50
warfarin
coumachlor
diphacinone
dicoumarol
chlorophacinone
bromadiolone
brodifacoum
difethialone
57.2 ± 1.1
53.7 ± 10.6
43.8 ±.3
46.2 ± 1.1
48.1 ± 1.9
50.3 ± 2.6
50.6 ± 2.6
42.9 ± 2.8
2
Equine
lysed cells
50
52.4 ± 8.4
48.1 ± 4.4
42.2 ± 1.9
43.2 ± 1.7
47.1 ± 3.2
44.9 ± 2.3
48.8 ± 0.1
46.2 ± 3.7
3
Equine
lysed cells
50
57.7 ± 0.9
51.6 ± 1.3
44.4 ± 1.4
44.5 ± 0.4
50.0 ± 1.5
50.0 ± 1.1
50.2 ± 3.0
40.4 ± 1.5
4
Porcine
untreated
50
56.5 ± 1.4
54.3 ± 2.5
50.1 ± 3.3
49.1 ± 2.8
52.0 ± 2.8
55.9 ± 1.6
58.7 ± 1.2
54.1 ± 9.8
5
Porcine
lysed cells
50
56.8 ± 3.0
51.1 ± 1.8
49.0 ± 2.7
48.0 ± 1.7
53.7 ± 5.5
49.0 ± 3.6
53.0 ± 3.9
53.0 ± 1.5
Untreated tissue was homogenized to uniform consistency prior to pre-weighing and spiking; Lysed tissue was homogenized, sonicated and frozen/thawed repeatedly prior to pre-weighing and spiking. b Sample type 3 was spiked at the method-originating laboratory (not blinded) for quality control purposes; all other test samples were pre-weighed, spiked and randomized by an independent laboratory in blinded manner. c n=2 a
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Table 5. Results obtained at the method-originating and collaborating laboratories on blinded samples prepared by an independent laboratory rodenticide warfarin
coumachlor
diphacinone
dicoumarol
chlorophacinone
bromadiolone
brodifacoum
difethialone
spike level
pooled meana
SDRb
RSDR
PRSDR
(ng/g)
(ng/g)
(ng/g)
(%)
(%)
HORRAT
50
66
4
6
25
0.2
1100
1256
206
16
16
1.0
1800
2065
372
18
15
1.2
50
74
5
6
25
0.3
900
1062
121
11
16
0.7
1900
2133
245
11
15
0.8
50
59
17
29
25
1.2
1000
1171
221
19
16
1.2
1950
2513
425
17
15
1.2
50
94
11
12
25
0.5
800
1232
262
21
16
1.3
1900
1869
156
8
15
0.6
50
68
6
9
25
0.4
1100
1204
130
11
16
0.7
1850
1911
106
6
15
0.4
50
60
12
20
25
0.8
800
716
144
20
16
1.3
1900
1812
393
22
15
1.5
50
68
5
8
25
0.3
1000
900
64
7
16
0.4
1800
1635
179
11
15
0.7
50
57
14
24
25
0.9
1150
929
139
15
16
0.9
1800
1881
397
21
15
1.4
n = 6; 3 samples were analyzed at each laboratory b standard deviation for pooled data set a
30
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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Figure 1.
General Hydroxycoumarin Structure Category Hydroxycoumarin
Indanedione
General Indanedione Structure
Warfarin (2.6)a
Rodenticide Substituent (R) Dicoumarol (2.07)b Coumachlor
Bromadiolone (4.27)
Brodifacoum (est. 8.5)
Diphacinone (4.27)
Chlorophacinone (4.22)
a
Partition coefficients (log Kow) from Ref. 30 Partition coefficient (log Kow) from Ref. 31 c Complete structure shown.
b
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Difethialonec (5.17)
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Figure 2: Typical MRM chromatograms of (I) warfarin, (II) coumachlor, (III) diphacinone, (IV) dicoumarol, (V) chlorophacinone, (VI) bromadiolone, (VII) brodifacoum and (VIII) difethialone. (A) Blank liver; (B) SRM of quantifying ion transition for liver spiked with ARs (25 ng/g); (C) SRM of confirming ion transition for spiked liver. Note the vertical scale for (A) is ~2 orders of magnitude lower than (B) and (C). 226x273mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
N/A (This is the Table of Contents Graphic) 254x190mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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