Metabolic stability tests are one of the fundamental steps at the preclinical stages of new drug development. Microsomes, used as a typical enzymatic model of liver biotransformation, can be a challenging matrix for analytical scientists due to a high concentration of cellular proteins and membrane lipids. In the work, we propose a new procedure integrating biotransformation reaction with SPME-like protocol for sample clean-up. It is beneficial to increase the overall quality of results in contrary to the typical protein precipitation approach. A set of ten arylpiperazine analogs, six of which are considered promising drug candidates (and four are accepted drugs) were used as a probe to assess the goodness of the newly proposed approach. In order to promote an efficient extraction protocol, a new, miniaturized shape of a sorbent, suitable to perform the extraction in 100 µL of the sample has been designed. Termination of the biotransformation process by protein denaturation with hot water was additionally evaluated. A quantitative structure-property relationship (QSPR) study using Orthogonal Partial Least Squares (OPLS) technique to reveal insights to the sorption mechanism was also performed. The obtained results showed the new 3D-printed sorbent can be an attractive basis for the new sample preparation approach for metabolic stability studies and an alternative for commercially available protocols based on solid-phase microextraction (SPME) or solid-phase extraction (SPE) principles.
Keywords: 3D-printed sorbent; Advances in pharmaceutical analysis; Metabolic stability; Microsomes; Solid-phase microextraction (SPME).
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