Celine Vanhee n, Steven Janvier, Goedele Moens, Eric Deconinck, Patricia Courselle. A simple dilute and shoot methodology for the identification and quantification of illegal insulin$[J]. Journal of Pharmaceutical Analysis, 2016, 5(5): 326-334.
Citation:
Celine Vanhee n, Steven Janvier, Goedele Moens, Eric Deconinck, Patricia Courselle. A simple dilute and shoot methodology for the identification and quantification of illegal insulin$[J]. Journal of Pharmaceutical Analysis, 2016, 5(5): 326-334.
Celine Vanhee n, Steven Janvier, Goedele Moens, Eric Deconinck, Patricia Courselle. A simple dilute and shoot methodology for the identification and quantification of illegal insulin$[J]. Journal of Pharmaceutical Analysis, 2016, 5(5): 326-334.
Citation:
Celine Vanhee n, Steven Janvier, Goedele Moens, Eric Deconinck, Patricia Courselle. A simple dilute and shoot methodology for the identification and quantification of illegal insulin$[J]. Journal of Pharmaceutical Analysis, 2016, 5(5): 326-334.
Division of Food, Medicines and Consumer Safety, Section Medicinal Products, Scientific Institute of Public Health WIV-ISP, J. Wytsmanstraat 14, B-1050 Brussels, Belgium
The occurrence of illegal medicines is a well-established global problem and concerns mostly small molecules. However, due to the advances in genomics and recombinant expression technologies there is an increased development of polypeptide therapeutics. Insulin is one of the best known polypeptide drug, and illegal versions of this medicine led to lethal incidents in the past. Therefore, it is crucial for the public health sector to develop reliable, efficient, cheap, unbiased and easily applicable active pharma-ceutical ingredient (API) identification and quantification strategies for routine analysis of suspected il-legal insulins. Here we demonstrate that our combined label-free full scan approach is not only able to distinguish between all those different versions of insulin and the insulins originating from different species, but also able to chromatographically separate human insulin and insulin lispro in conditions that are compatible with mass spectrometry (MS). Additionally, we were also able to selectively quantify the different insulins, including human insulin and insulin lispro according to the validation criteria, put forward by the United Nations (UN), for the analysis of seized illicit drugs. The proposed identification and quantification method is currently being used in our official medicines control laboratory to analyze insulins retrieved from the illegal market.