Development and Validation of a UPLC-MS/MS Method for the Quantification of Amantadine in Rat Plasma: Application to a Pharmacokinetic Study Under High-Altitude Hypoxia and Mechanistic Insights
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Results
2.1. LC-MS/MS Optimization
2.2. Method Validation Results
2.2.1. Results of Selectivity, Specificity, and Carry-Over
2.2.2. Linearity and Lower Limit of Quantification (LLOQ) Results
2.2.3. Accuracy and Precision Results
2.2.4. Results for Recovery and Matrix Effect
2.2.5. Stability Test Results
2.2.6. Dilution Integrity Results
2.3. Pharmacokinetic Analysis
3. Discussion
- Absorption: Both drugs were well absorbed. Hypoxia-induced gastrointestinal changes (e.g., altered motility, blood flow, and pH) could theoretically affect drug absorption [24,25,26]. The lack of change in Tmax and Cmax of AMA suggests its absorption was largely unperturbed in this acute hypoxic model. In contrast, the significantly higher Cmax of MEM may indicate an enhanced absorption rate or extent under hypoxia, possibly due to its different physicochemical properties or susceptibility to hypoxia-altered intestinal transporters—a hypothesis that requires further investigation.
- Distribution: The response of Vz/F to hypoxia differed between the two drugs; while MEM exhibited a significant decrease, AMA showed only a non-significant increasing trend (p = 0.113). This discrepancy could be attributed partly to their differing lipophilicity (LogP ~2.44 for AMA vs. ~3.28 for MEM), which influences the baseline tissue distribution and may modulate sensitivity to hypoxia-induced changes in perfusion or membrane permeability [27,28]. Furthermore, differences in tissue-binding characteristics and distribution kinetics—potentially including varied sensitivity of blood–brain barrier penetration to hypoxic stress—might also contribute to the opposing trends in Vz/F, although this requires direct confirmation in future studies. Hypoxia-induced alterations in drug distribution are compound-specific. While many central nervous system drugs, such as midazolam and phenytoin, show significantly reduced brain-to-plasma ratios under chronic hypoxia due to upregulated efflux transporters (e.g., P-glycoprotein (P-gp)) at the blood–brain barrier [20,29], the distribution of amantadine appears to be governed by different mechanisms. In this study, amantadine exhibited a significant increase in VRT under high-altitude exposure without marked changes in AUC or Cmax, indicating heightened inter-individual variability in its tissue distribution and/or elimination rather than a uniform shift in clearance or central penetration. This suggests that for amantadine, whose interaction with efflux transporters such as P-gp is less defined than that of classical benzodiazepines or MEM [18], hypoxia may predominantly affect physiological variables such as regional perfusion, plasma protein binding, or local pH partition, leading to more variable distribution kinetics rather than consistent directional changes in brain exposure [30].
- Metabolism: This is the key differentiator that explains contrasting PK outcomes. AMA undergoes minimal hepatic metabolism, with approximately 85% excreted unchanged in the urine. In contrast, approximately 48% of MEM is excreted unchanged, while the remainder is primarily metabolized in the liver to polar metabolites [31,32]. Consequently, systemic exposure to AMA (AUC and Cmax) and its CLz/F remained unchanged in our acute hypoxia model. The observed prolonged elimination half-life and increased variability (VRT) could be consistent with altered renal tubular transport (potentially involving transporters such as organic cation transporters (OCT2)) rather than suppressed metabolism. High-altitude hypoxia potently downregulates key drug-metabolizing enzymes, including CYP3A4, CYP1A2, and UGT1A1, via repression of the pregnane X receptor (PXR) and constitutive androstane receptor (CAR) [33]. The inhibition of its metabolic clearance, coupled with a likely reduction in renal excretion, explains the profound increase in MEM’s systemic exposure (AUC) and the decrease in its apparent clearance (CLz/F) observed under identical conditions. Similarly, diazepam (a CYP3A4/2C19 substrate) showed a 25-fold increase in AUC under hypoxia [19,23]. Therefore, the increased exposure to MEM likely stems largely from inhibited hepatic and possibly cerebral CYP450-mediated metabolism, a mechanism not applicable to AMA. These findings support the concept that hypoxia most profoundly affects the PK of drugs reliant on hepatic metabolism.
- Excretion: Both AMA and MEM are primarily renally eliminated. Hypoxia reduces renal blood flow and GFR [34], which can impair excretion. The fact that AMA’s systemic CLz/F remained unchanged suggests a possible compensatory mechanism or that the 72 h acute hypoxic insult was insufficient to significantly impair the net renal clearance of this compound in rats. However, the significantly prolonged t1/2z and increased VRT for AMA hint at altered elimination kinetics. This could reflect increased variability in renal tubular handling rather than a consistent reduction in the net excretion rate. AMA is a substrate of renal OCT2 [35]. Hypoxia may variably affect the function or expression of these transporters among individuals, leading to increased variability (higher VRT) in the elimination process without changing the mean clearance. The unchanged AUC supports this interpretation; while the elimination process became more variable and slower in some individuals (prolonged t1/2z), the overall extent of elimination over 24 h was similar. In contrast, for MEM, reduced metabolism coupled with potentially impaired renal excretion likely contributed synergistically to its markedly reduced CLz/F ratio and increased AUC.
4. Materials and Methods
4.1. Chemicals and Reagents
4.2. Instrumentation
4.3. LC-MS/MS Analytical Conditions
4.4. Preparation of Standard and Quality Control Samples
4.5. Sample Preparation
4.6. Method Validation
4.6.1. Selectivity, Specificity, and Carry-Over
4.6.2. Linearity and LLOQ
4.6.3. Accuracy and Precision
4.6.4. Recovery and Matrix Effect
4.6.5. Stability
4.6.6. Dilution Effects
4.7. Pharmacokinetics Study Under Simulated High-Altitude Conditions
4.7.1. Animal Group Allocation and High-Altitude Exposure Protocol
4.7.2. Drug Administration and Plasma Sample Collection
4.8. Statistical Analysis
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
| ADME | Absorption, distribution, metabolism, excretion |
| AMA | Amantadine |
| AUC | Area under the concentration–time curve |
| CAR | Constitutive androstane receptor |
| CE | Collision energy |
| Cmax | Maximum concentration |
| CLz/F | Apparent clearance |
| CV | Coefficient of variation |
| CYP450 | Cytochrome p450 |
| ESI | Electrospray ionization |
| GFR | Glomerular filtration rate |
| HAE | High-altitude exposure |
| HPLC | High-performance liquid chromatography |
| ICH | International Conference on Harmonization |
| IS | Internal standard |
| IS-MF | IS-normalized matrix factor |
| LAC | Low-altitude control |
| LC-MS/MS | Liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry |
| LLOQ | Lower limit of quantification |
| MEM | Memantine |
| MF | Matrix factor |
| MRT | Mean residence time |
| OCT2 | Organic cation transporter 2 |
| P-gp | P-glycoprotein |
| PK | Pharmacokinetic(s) |
| PXR | Pregnane X receptor |
| QC | Quality control |
| RT | Room temperature |
| SD | Standard deviation |
| SRM | Selective reaction monitoring |
| t1/2z | Terminal elimination half-life |
| Tmax | Time to maximum concentration |
| ULOQ | Upper limit of quantitation |
| UPLC-MS/MS | Ultra-performance liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry |
| VRT | Variance of residence time |
| Vz/F | Apparent volume of distribution |
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| Analytes | Precursor Ion (amu) | Product Ion (amu) | CE (eV) | Tube Lens (V) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AMA | 152.1 | 135.2 | 16 | 66 |
| 152.1 | 93.2 | 28 | ||
| MEM | 180.1 | 163.2 | 15 | 58 |
| 180.1 | 107.2 | 25 |
| Analytes | IS | Regression Equation | R2 |
|---|---|---|---|
| AMA | MEM | Y = 0.0125069 × X | 0.9997 |
| Y = 0.0122042 × X | 0.9996 | ||
| Y = 0.0123832 × X | 0.9994 |
| Nominal Concentration (μg/L) | Intra-Day (n = 6) | Inter-Day (3 Days, n = 18) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Measured Concentration (μg/L) | Accuracy (%) | Precision (CV, %) | Measured Concentration (μg/L) | Accuracy (%) | Precision (CV, %) | |
| 5.0 | 5.62 ± 0.08 | 112.38 | 1.42 | 5.54 ± 0.25 | 110.72 | 4.51 |
| 15.0 | 15.07 ± 0.85 | 100.47 | 5.64 | 15.04 ± 0.81 | 100.25 | 5.39 |
| 150.0 | 143.33 ± 1.30 | 95.55 | 0.91 | 147.69 ± 7.54 | 98.46 | 5.11 |
| 750.0 | 737.84 ± 14.03 | 98.38 | 1.90 | 757.67 ± 23.44 | 101.02 | 3.09 |
| Nominal Concentration (μg/L) | IS Normalized Recovery (%) | CV of IS Normalized Recovery (%) | IS Normalized Matrix Factor (%) | CV of IS Normalized Matrix Factor (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 15.0 | 99.44 ± 5.28 | 5.31 | 94.16 ± 3.17 | 3.37 |
| 150.0 | 94.61 ± 3.47 | 3.67 | 88.50 ± 3.28 | 3.71 |
| 750.0 | 99.85 ± 3.62 | 3.63 | 92.13 ± 1.40 | 1.52 |
| Times | Nominal Concentration (μg/L) | RT (%) | +4 °C (%) | −80 °C (%) | RFT (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 24 h | 15.0 | 2.04 | - | - | - |
| 150.0 | −3.37 | - | - | - | |
| 750.0 | 3.33 | - | - | - | |
| 48 h | 15.0 | - | 3.23 | - | - |
| 150.0 | - | 5.63 | - | - | |
| 750.0 | - | 2.77 | - | - | |
| 7d | 15.0 | - | - | 2.71 | −2.23 |
| 150.0 | - | - | 4.88 | 2.02 | |
| 750.0 | - | - | 3.21 | 2.22 | |
| 21d | 15.0 | - | - | 7.64 | - |
| 150.0 | - | - | 9.95 | - | |
| 750.0 | - | - | 5.51 | - |
| Parameter | Unit | LAC Group | HAE Group | p-Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AUC(0–t) | μg/L×h | 2791.02 ± 674.13 | 2951.26 ± 734.64 | 0.656 |
| Cmax | μg/L | 715.28 ± 157.19 | 776.09 ± 196.68 | 0.506 |
| Tmax | H | 1.22 ± 0.49 | 0.94 ± 0.48 | 0.264 |
| t1/2z | H | 2.06 ± 0.58 | 3.20 ± 1.11 | 0.021 * |
| λz | 1/h | 0.36 ± 0.08 | 0.24 ± 0.09 | 0.019 * |
| Vz/F | L/kg | 10.86 ± 2.60 | 17.20 ± 10.29 | 0.113 |
| CLz/F | L/h/kg | 3.74 ± 0.79 | 3.62 ± 1.23 | 0.826 |
| MRT(0–t) | H | 3.36 ± 0.73 | 3.50 ± 0.37 | 0.645 |
| MRT(0–∞) | H | 3.39 ± 0.78 | 3.66 ± 0.52 | 0.424 |
| VRT(0–t) | h^2 | 9.11 ± 3.95 | 13.69 ± 4.43 | 0.046 * |
| VRT(0–∞) | h^2 | 9.76 ± 5.28 | 18.00 ± 9.12 | 0.044 * |
| Calibration Concentration (μg/L) | QC Concentrations (μg/L) | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | LLOQ | Low | Medium | High |
| 5 | 10 | 25 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500 | 1000 | 5 | 15 | 150 | 750 |
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Wang, C.; Yan, W.; Zhang, Y.; Wang, J.; Fang, J.; Ma, Y.; Ji, Q.; Sun, Y.; Li, W.; Wang, R. Development and Validation of a UPLC-MS/MS Method for the Quantification of Amantadine in Rat Plasma: Application to a Pharmacokinetic Study Under High-Altitude Hypoxia and Mechanistic Insights. Pharmaceuticals 2026, 19, 312. https://doi.org/10.3390/ph19020312
Wang C, Yan W, Zhang Y, Wang J, Fang J, Ma Y, Ji Q, Sun Y, Li W, Wang R. Development and Validation of a UPLC-MS/MS Method for the Quantification of Amantadine in Rat Plasma: Application to a Pharmacokinetic Study Under High-Altitude Hypoxia and Mechanistic Insights. Pharmaceuticals. 2026; 19(2):312. https://doi.org/10.3390/ph19020312
Chicago/Turabian StyleWang, Chang, Wen Yan, Yingfei Zhang, Jinwen Wang, Jingyang Fang, Yuliang Ma, Qian Ji, Yuemei Sun, Wenbin Li, and Rong Wang. 2026. "Development and Validation of a UPLC-MS/MS Method for the Quantification of Amantadine in Rat Plasma: Application to a Pharmacokinetic Study Under High-Altitude Hypoxia and Mechanistic Insights" Pharmaceuticals 19, no. 2: 312. https://doi.org/10.3390/ph19020312
APA StyleWang, C., Yan, W., Zhang, Y., Wang, J., Fang, J., Ma, Y., Ji, Q., Sun, Y., Li, W., & Wang, R. (2026). Development and Validation of a UPLC-MS/MS Method for the Quantification of Amantadine in Rat Plasma: Application to a Pharmacokinetic Study Under High-Altitude Hypoxia and Mechanistic Insights. Pharmaceuticals, 19(2), 312. https://doi.org/10.3390/ph19020312

