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Title: Investigation of an enhanced resolution triple quadrupole mass spectrometer for high-throughput liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry assays. Author: Yang L, Amad M, Winnik WM, Schoen AE, Schweingruber H, Mylchreest I, Rudewicz PJ. Journal: Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom; 2002; 16(21):2060-6. PubMed ID: 12391581. Abstract: Triple quadrupole mass spectrometers, when operated in multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) mode, offer a unique combination of sensitivity, specificity, and dynamic range. Consequently, the triple quadrupole is the workhorse for high-throughput quantitation within the pharmaceutical industry. However, in the past, the unit mass resolution of quadrupole instruments has been a limitation when interference from matrix or metabolites cannot be eliminated. With recent advances in instrument design, triple quadrupole instruments now afford mass resolution of less than 0.1 Dalton (Da) full width at half maximum (FWHM). This paper describes the evaluation of an enhanced resolution triple quadrupole mass spectrometer for high-throughput bioanalysis with emphasis on comparison of selectivity, sensitivity, dynamic range, precision, accuracy, and stability under both unit mass (1 Da FWHM) and enhanced (<or=0.1 Da FWHM) resolution. The advantage of enhanced resolution was demonstrated in the case of mometasone with polypropylene glycol (PPG) interference. At unit mass resolution, the transmitted precursor ion from the first quadrupole contained not only protonated molecules from mometasone, but also PPG interference. At enhanced resolution only selected mometasone peaks were transmitted, and no interference from PPG was detected. Sensitivity of the instrument was demonstrated with 10 femtograms of descarboethoxyloratadine injected on-column, for which a signal-to-noise (S/N) ratio of 24 was obtained for MRM chromatograms at both unit and enhanced resolution. Absolute signals obtained at enhanced resolution were about one-third those obtained at unit mass resolution. However, S/N was maintained at enhanced resolution due to the proportional decrease in noise level. Finally, the stability of the instrument operating at enhanced resolution was demonstrated during an overnight 17 h period that was used to validate a liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry (LC/MS/MS) assay for the quantitation of loratadine and descarboethoxyloratadine in human plasma. Assay performances (dynamic range, correlation coefficients for standard curves, precision and accuracy for QC samples) under unit and enhanced resolution were both within current pharmaceutical and regulatory guidelines demonstrating the stability of the mass spectrometer operating at enhanced resolution for typical bioanalytical high-throughput applications.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]