Electrophoresis, Vol.28, No.21, 3908-3914, 2007
Development of a CE method for the determination of mycophenolic acid in human plasma: A comparison with HPLC
Mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) is a widely used drug for the maintenance of immunosuppressive therapy in renal-transplant recipients. MMF is rapidly metabolized in vivo to mycophenolic acid (MPA), a reversible, noncompetitive inhibitor of inosine monophosphate dehydrogenase, which represents a limiting enzyme in lymphocyte proliferation. MPA shows large interindividual. pharmacokinetic variability: its monitoring is therefore of primary importance to achieve adequate immunosuppression with minimized risk of graft rejection or toxicity. We developed a CE method for the determination of total MPA (tMPA) in plasma, based on easy sample preparation; CE evaluation of tMPA was performed in 30 mmol/L sodium-borate with 10 mmol/L SDS (pH 10.00) at 25 degrees C using a 60 cm (54.5 to window) uncoated capillary with UV detection at 254 nm wavelength. MPA was readily detectable in plasma; the CE method was linear in the range of 0.7-120 mu g/mL (r >0.992). Intra- and interassay imprecision was <7% except for the lowest spiked MPA concentration, which had an intra-assay RSD% of 14.7 compared to 18.3 interassay. Data by CE were compared with results obtained by a validated HPLC method. CE assay of tMPA exhibited a very good correlation (r(2) >0.988) with respect to HPLC; Bland-Altman difference versus average showed a mean of -0.18 mu g/mL +/- 1.14 SD. CE determination of tMPA is a robust, sensitive and reproducible method with the advantage over HPLC of being fast, simple and unexpensive, also enabling quick assessment of MPA for pharmacokinetic studies.