1. Academic Validation
  2. LC-MS/MS-Based Monitoring of In Vivo Protein Biotransformation: Quantitative Determination of Trastuzumab and Its Deamidation Products in Human Plasma

LC-MS/MS-Based Monitoring of In Vivo Protein Biotransformation: Quantitative Determination of Trastuzumab and Its Deamidation Products in Human Plasma

  • Anal Chem. 2016 Feb 2;88(3):1871-7. doi: 10.1021/acs.analchem.5b04276.
Peter Bults 1 2 Rainer Bischoff 2 Hilde Bakker 1 Jourik A Gietema 3 Nico C van de Merbel 1 2
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Bioanalytical Laboratory, PRA Health Sciences, Early Development Services, Amerikaweg 18, 9407 TK Assen, The Netherlands.
  • 2 Analytical Biochemistry, Department of Pharmacy, University of Groningen , A. Deusinglaan 1, 9700 AV Groningen, The Netherlands.
  • 3 Faculty of Medical Sciences, Department of Medical Oncology, University Medical Centre Groningen , Hanzeplein 1, 9713 GZ Groningen, The Netherlands.
Abstract

An LC-MS/MS-based method is described for quantitatively monitoring the in vivo deamidation of the biopharmaceutical monoclonal antibody trastuzumab at a crucial position in its complementarity determining region (CDR). The multiplexed LC-MS/MS assay using selected reaction monitoring (SRM) allows simultaneous quantitation of five molecular species derived from trastuzumab after tryptic digestion: a stable signature peptide (FTISADTSK), a deamidation-sensitive signature peptide (IYPTNGYTR), its deamidated products (IYPTDGYTR and IYPTisoDGYTR), and a succinimide intermediate (IYPTsuccGYTR). Digestion of a 50 μL plasma sample is performed at pH 7 for 3 h at 37 °C, which combines a reasonable (>80%) digestion efficiency with a minimal (<1%) formation of deamidation products during digestion. Rapid in vitro deamidation was observed at higher pH, leading to a (large) overestimation of the concentrations of deamidation products in the original plasma sample. The LC-MS/MS method was validated in accordance with international bioanalytical guidelines over the clinically relevant range of 0.5 to 500 μg/mL with bias and CV values well below 15%. Deamidation of trastuzumab was observed in plasma both in a 56 day in vitro forced degradation study (up to 37% of the total drug concentration) and in samples obtained from breast Cancer patients after treatment with the drug for several months (up to 25%). Comparison with a validated ELISA method for trastuzumab showed that deamidation of the drug at the CDR leads to a loss of recognition by the Antibodies used in the ELISA assay.

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