6533b835fe1ef96bd129ff84
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Analysis of psychoactive substances in water by information dependent acquisition on a hybrid quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometer.
Vicente AndreuYolanda PicoMaría Jesús Andrés-costasubject
010501 environmental sciencesWastewaterMass spectrometryTandem mass spectrometry01 natural sciencesBiochemistryRiver waterHigh resolution mass spectrometryAnalytical ChemistryRiversTandem Mass SpectrometryQuantificationPsychoactive drugsHumansSample preparationSolid phase extractionQuadrupole time of flightChromatography High Pressure Liquid0105 earth and related environmental sciencesPsychotropic DrugsChromatographyChemistryIllicit Drugs010401 analytical chemistryOrganic ChemistrySolid Phase ExtractionWaterGeneral MedicineQuantitative determination0104 chemical sciencesWastewaterEnvironmental chemistryScreeningDatabases ChemicalWater Pollutants Chemicaldescription
Emerging drugs of abuse, belonging to many different chemical classes, are attracting users with promises of “legal” highs and easy access via internet. Prevalence of their consumption and abuse through wastewater-based epidemiology can only be realized if a suitable analytical screening procedure exists to detect and quantify them in water. Solid-phase extraction and ultra-high performance liquid chromatography quadrupole time-of-flight-mass spectrometry (UHPLC–QqTOF–MS/MS) was applied for rapid suspect screening as well as for the quantitative determination of 42 illicit drugs and metabolites in water. Using this platform, we were able to identify amphetamines, tryptamines, piperazines, pyrrolidinophenones, arylcyclohexylamines, cocainics, opioids and cannabinoids. Additionally, paracetamol, carbamazepine, ibersartan, valsartan, sulfamethoxazole, terbumeton, diuron, etc. (including degradation products as 3-hydroxy carbamazepine or deethylterbuthylazine) were detected. This method encompasses easy sample preparation and rapid identification of psychoactive drugs against a database that cover more than 2000 compounds that ionized in positive mode, and possibility to identify metabolites and degradation products as well as unknown compounds. The method for river water, influent and effluents samples was fully validated for the target psychoactive substances including assessment of matrix effects (-88–67.8%), recovery (42–115%), precision (<19%) and limits of quantification (1–100 ng L). Method efficiency was thoroughly investigated for a wide range of waste and surface waters. Robust and repeatable functioning of this platform in the screening, identification and quantification of traditional and new psychoactive drugs biomarkers and other water contaminants is demonstrated.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2016-08-26 | Journal of chromatography. A |