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Microbial degradation products of lurasidone and their significance in postmortem toxicology
Authors:Jared W. Castle  Danielle M. Butzbach  G. Stewart Walker  Claire E. Lenehan  Frank Reith  Samuel P. Costello  K. Paul Kirkbride
Affiliation:1. College of Science and Engineering, Flinders University, Bedford Park, South Australia, Australia;2. College of Science and Engineering, Flinders University, Bedford Park, South Australia, Australia

Forensic Science SA, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia;3. CSIRO Land & Water, Environmental Contaminant Mitigation and Technologies, Glen Osmond, South Australia, Australia

School of Biological Sciences, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia;4. Department of Gastroenterology, The Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Woodville South, South Australia, Australia

Abstract:Recent research reported that lurasidone degrades in unpreserved ante-mortem human whole blood inoculated with microorganisms known to dominate postmortem blood specimens. In vitro degradation occurred at a similar rate to risperidone, known to degrade in authentic postmortem specimens until below analytical detection limits. To identify the lurasidone degradation products formed, an Agilent 6520 liquid chromatograph quadrupole-time-of-flight mass spectrometer (LC-QTOF-MS) operating in auto-MS/MS mode was used. Numerous degradation products not previously reported in prior in vitro or in vivo pharmacokinetic studies or forced degradation studies were detected. Accurate mass data, mass fragmentation data, acetylation experiments, and a proposed mechanism of degradation analogous to risperidone supports initial identification of the major degradation product as N-debenzisothiazole-lurasidone (calculated m/z [M + H]+ = 360.2646). A standard was unavailable to conclusively confirm this identification. Retrospective data analysis of postmortem cases involving lurasidone identified the presence of the major degradation product in four of six cases where lurasidone was also detected. This finding is significant for toxicology laboratories screening for this drug in postmortem casework. The major postmortem lurasidone degradation product has consequently been added to the LC-QTOF-MS drug screen at Forensic Science SA (FSSA) to indicate postmortem lurasidone degradation in authentic postmortem blood specimens and as a marker of lurasidone administration in the event lurasidone is degraded to concentrations below detection limits.
Keywords:LC-QTOF-MS  lurasidone  postmortem toxicology  stability  whole blood
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