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Title: Monitoring Plasma Levels of Donepezil, 5-O-Desmethyl-Donepezil, 6-O-Desmethyl-Donepezil, and Donepezil-N-Oxide by a Novel HPLC Method in Patients With Alzheimer Disease. Author: Groppa F, Coin A, De Rosa G, Granziera S, Alexopoulos C, Pamio MV, Padrini R. Journal: Ther Drug Monit; 2016 Feb; 38(1):108-13. PubMed ID: 26349080. Abstract: BACKGROUND: In humans, donepezil (D) is metabolized to 5-O-desmethyl-donepezil (5DD), 6-O-desmethyl-donepezil (6DD), and donepezil-N-oxide (DNox). Although 6DD and DNox are pharmacologically active, the activity of 5DD is unknown. At present, no routine methods are available to detect D and its 3 metabolites simultaneously. In this study, a novel high-performance liquid chromatography method was developed and applied to a population of patients with Alzheimer disease on stable treatment with the drug. METHODS: Liquid-liquid extraction from plasma was accomplished by means of a solvent mixture of n-hexane/dichloromethane/ethylacetate (45:40:15) after sample alkalinization. Disopyramide was the internal standard. After evaporation, the residue was reconstituted in 200 μL of mobile phase (acetonitrile 85%:1% acetic acid 15%) and 50 μL was injected into the high-performance liquid chromatography column (X-Terra, RP8; flow: 1 mL/min). Photometric and fluorimetric detectors were used in tandem, to maximize the sensitivity of fluorescent compounds (D, 5DD, and DNox) and also to reveal nonfluorescent compounds (6DD and internal standard). RESULTS: The method was linear in the 10-100 ng/mL concentration range. Imprecision (coefficient of variation) varied between 3.2% and 12.6% and inaccuracy (% mean absolute error) between 1.3% and 13.3%, depending on the compound, concentration, and detection mode. The quantitation limits were 0.1-0.3 ng/mL for fluorescent compounds and 1.2-4.3 ng/mL for photometric compounds. D, 5DD, 6DD, and DNox through concentrations were measured in 54 patients with Alzheimer disease on treatment with D (10 mg q.d.). No interfering peaks by endogenous compounds or coadministered drugs were noted. Plasma concentrations were quite variable among patients (D: 10-106 ng/mL; 5DD: 0.07-2.8 ng/mL; 6DD: 1.2-36 ng/mL; DNox: 0.5-45.4 ng/mL). Of note, in 6 patients, the plasma concentrations of the 2 active metabolites (6DD and DNox) were higher than those of the parent drug. CONCLUSIONS: The above method proved to be suitable for therapeutic drug monitoring and may be useful in ascertaining the real contribution of metabolites to the therapeutic effects of donepezil.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]