Thromb Haemost 2011; 105(04): 696-705
DOI: 10.1160/TH10-09-0582
New Technologies, Diagnostic Tools and Drugs
Schattauer GmbH

An improved method for specific and quantitative determination of the clopidogrel active metabolite isomers in human plasma

Gilles Tuffal
1   sanofi-aventis R&D, Drug Disposition, Disposition Safety and Animal Research, Montpellier, France
,
Sebastien Roy
2   sanofi-aventis R&D, Drug Disposition, Disposition Safety and Animal Research, Chilly-Mazarin, France
,
Melanie Lavisse
2   sanofi-aventis R&D, Drug Disposition, Disposition Safety and Animal Research, Chilly-Mazarin, France
,
Denis Brasseur
2   sanofi-aventis R&D, Drug Disposition, Disposition Safety and Animal Research, Chilly-Mazarin, France
,
Joe Schofield
2   sanofi-aventis R&D, Drug Disposition, Disposition Safety and Animal Research, Chilly-Mazarin, France
,
Nathalie Delesque Touchard
3   sanofi-aventis R&D, Dedicated Project Unit, Early to candidate, Toulouse, France
,
Pierre Savi
3   sanofi-aventis R&D, Dedicated Project Unit, Early to candidate, Toulouse, France
,
Nicolas Bremond
1   sanofi-aventis R&D, Drug Disposition, Disposition Safety and Animal Research, Montpellier, France
,
Marie-Claude Rouchon
1   sanofi-aventis R&D, Drug Disposition, Disposition Safety and Animal Research, Montpellier, France
,
Fabrice Hurbin
1   sanofi-aventis R&D, Drug Disposition, Disposition Safety and Animal Research, Montpellier, France
,
Eric Sultan
1   sanofi-aventis R&D, Drug Disposition, Disposition Safety and Animal Research, Montpellier, France
› Author Affiliations
Financial support: This study was funded by sanofi-aventis and Bristol-Myers Squibb.
Further Information

Publication History

Received: 10 September 2010

Accepted after minor revision: 07 February 2010

Publication Date:
28 November 2017 (online)

Summary

Pharmacokinetic analyses of clopidogrel are hampered by the existence of multiple active metabolite isomers (H1 to H4) and their instability in blood. We sought to retest the pharmacodynamic activities of the four individual active metabolite isomers in vitro, with the ultimate aim of determining the isomers responsible for clopidogrel activity in vivo. In vitro activity was evaluated by measuring binding of [33P]-2-methylthio-ADP on P2Y12-expressing Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells and human platelets in platelet-rich plasma (PRP). A stereoselective method that used reverse-phase ultra high-performance liquid chromatography (UHPLC) and tandem mass spectrometry (MS) was developed to measure individual concentrations of the stable 3’-methoxyacetophe-none (MP) derivatives of H1–H4. The new method was used to analyze plasma samples from clopidogrel-treated subjects enrolled in a phase I clinical trial. In vitro binding assays confirmed the previously observed biological activity of H4 (IC50: CHO-P2Y12: 0.12 μM; PRP: 0.97 μM) and inactivity of H3, and demonstrated that H1 was also inactive. Furthermore, H2 demonstrated approximately half of the biological activity in vitro compared with H4. Optimisation of UHPLC conditions and MS collision parameters allowed the resolution and detection of the four derivatised active metabolite isomers (MP-H1 to MP-H4). The stereoselective assay was extensively validated, and was accurate and precise over the concentration range 0.5–250 ng/ml. Only MP-H3 and MP-H4 were quantifiable in incurred clinical samples. Based on in vitro pharmacodynamic data and found concentrations, the active metabolite isomer H4 is the only diastereoisomer of clinical relevance for documenting the pharmacokinetic profile of the active metabolite of clopidogrel.

 
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