Addressing metabolite safety during first-in-man studies using 14C-labeled drug and accelerator mass spectrometry
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journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-13, 09:17 authored by Graham Lappin, Mark Seymour<p>Active drug metabolites formed in humans but present in relatively low abundance in preclinical species can lead to unpredicted adverse effects during clinical use. The regulatory guidelines in recent years have therefore required that the metabolism of a drug be quantitatively compared between preclinical species and human at the earliest practicable stage of drug development. Amongst the variety of methods available, inclusion of low radioactive doses of 14C drug in first-in-man studies coupled to the sensitive analytical technology of accelerator MS (AMS) has found utility. Measurement of 14C by AMS allows for quantification of metabolites, even if their structures are unknown, and, when used in conjunction with LC-MS, can provide both quantitative and structural data. This review examines a typical approach to using AMS and associated analytical methods in addressing the regulatory guidelines and discusses a number of possible scenarios including the question of steady state. © 2010 Future Science Ltd.</p>
History
School affiliated with
- School of Pharmacy (Research Outputs)
Publication Title
BioanalysisVolume
2Issue
7Pages/Article Number
1315-1324Publisher
Future ScienceExternal DOI
ISSN
1757-6180eISSN
1757-6199Date Submitted
2013-03-21Date Accepted
2013-03-21Date of First Publication
2013-03-21Date of Final Publication
2013-03-21ePrints ID
8213Usage metrics
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animalAnimalsarea under the curvecarboncarbon 14Carbon Radioisotopeschemistryconcentration responsedosimetrydrugdrug metabolismdrug safetyhalf life timehumanHumansin vitro studyintermethod comparisonisotope analysisisotope labelingmass spectrometrymetabolismmetabolitemethodologynonhumannuclear magnetic resonancePharmaceutical Preparationspractice guidelineprocess developmentradioisotope decayreviewsensitivity analysistoxicity testingToxicity Tests
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