posted on 2018-01-17, 14:03authored byKraig
E. Strayer, Heather M. Antonides, Matthew P. Juhascik, Raminta Daniulaityte, Ioana E. Sizemore
The
United States and numerous other countries worldwide are currently
experiencing a public health crisis due to the abuse of illicitly
manufactured fentanyl (IMF) and its analogues. This manuscript describes
the development of a liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry-based
method for the multiplex detection of N = 24 IMF
analogues and metabolites in whole blood at concentrations as low
as 0.1–0.5 ng mL–1. These available IMFs
were fentanyl, norfentanyl, furanyl norfentanyl, remifentanil acid,
butyryl norfentanyl, remifentanil, acetyl fentanyl, alfentanil, AH-7921,
U-47700, acetyl fentanyl 4-methylphenethyl, acrylfentanyl, para-methoxyfentanyl, despropionyl fentanyl (4-ANPP), furanyl
fentanyl, despropionyl para-fluorofentanyl, carfentanil,
(±)-cis-3-methyl fentanyl, butyryl fentanyl,
isobutyryl fentanyl, sufentanil, valeryl fentanyl, para-fluorobutyryl fentanyl, and para-fluoroisobutyryl
fentanyl. Most IMF analogues (N = 22) could be easily
distinguished from one another; the isomeric forms butyryl/isobutyryl
fentanyl and para-fluorobutyryl/para-fluoroisobutyryl fentanyl could not be differentiated. N = 13 of these IMF analogues were quantified for illustrative purposes,
and their forensic quality control standards were also validated for
limit of detection (0.017–0.056 ng mL–1),
limit of quantitation (0.100–0.500 ng mL–1), selectivity/sensitivity, ionization suppression/enhancement (87–118%),
process efficiency (60–95%), recovery (64–97%), bias
(<20%), and precision (>80%). This flexible, time- and cost-efficient
method was successfully implemented at the Montgomery County Coroner’s
Office/Miami Valley Regional Crime Laboratory in Dayton, Ohio, where
it aided in the analysis of N = 725 postmortem blood
samples collected from February 2015 to November 2016.