scholarly journals Quantification of Urinary Oxalate by Liquid Chromatography–Tandem Mass Spectrometry with Online Weak Anion Exchange Chromatography

2006 ◽  
Vol 52 (12) ◽  
pp. 2296-2299 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian G Keevil ◽  
Susan Thornton

Abstract Background: Urinary oxalate is commonly measured with an enzymatic assay that is specific but requires a manual clean-up step to reduce ascorbic acid interference. We developed a urinary oxalate assay that uses liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) with anion exchange chromatography and simple sample preparation. Methods: We added calibrator or urine sample (10 μL) to 10 μL of 13C2 oxalate and 400 μL of water and performed separation on a Waters OASIS WAX column, flow rate 0.6 mL/min, and then elution for 0.3 min with water containing 2 mmol/L ammonium acetate and 1 mL/L formic acid and for 1.0 min with 750 mL/L methanol containing 20 mL/L ammonia. We detected multiple reaction monitoring transitions m/z 88.6 > 60.5 and m/z 90.5 > 61.5 for oxalic acid and 13C2-oxalate, respectively, with a Quattro micro tandem mass spectrometer in electrospray-negative mode. Results: Oxalate and 13C2-oxalate eluted at 1.2 min. Mean recovery was 95%, limit of detection 3.0 μmol/L, lower limit of quantification 100.0 μmol/L, linearity to 2212 μmol/L, imprecision <6%, and bias <3% at 166, 880, and 1720 μmol/L. Oxalate eluted after the main area of ion suppression. Mean response ratios for urine and aqueous samples, enriched at 200 and 1000 μmol/L, were 3.7% and 5.4%, respectively. No interference was observed from other organic acids. Passing and Bablock regression analysis comparing the Trinity Biotech enzymatic reagent set and LC-MS/MS showed LC-MS/MS = 1.06 (enzymatic assay) −21.2, r = 0.964, n = 110. Bland Altman analysis showed general agreement, with a mean bias of −1.9 μmol/L. Conclusion: This LC-MS/MS assay is applicable for quantifying urinary oxalate excretion.

Author(s):  
David J Marshall ◽  
Joanne E Adaway ◽  
Brian G Keevil

Background Analysis of citrate and oxalate in a 24-h urine sample is important in the screening and monitoring of patients with nephrolithiasis. To streamline the analytical process, it was decided to combine oxalate and citrate and analyse them simultaneously in the same assay. Objective A highly sensitive and specific assay for analysis of urine citrate and oxalate was developed using liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) with a simple weak anion exchange solid phase extraction (WAX SPE) clean-up procedure. Method Premixed calibrator/acidified urine (50  µL) was combined with mixed internal standard (13C2 oxalate/citrate-d4) and 5% v/v formic acid in water and passed through a Waters WAX SPE plate. After clean-up steps, the plate was eluted with 5% NH3 in methanol, the eluent was dried down and re-constituted with 100  µL distilled water. Separation was then performed on an HSS T3 2.1 × 50 mm column (Waters, Manchester, UK), flow rate of 0.5 mL/min using a gradient of aqueous and organic mobile phases. We detected multiple reaction monitoring transitions m/z citrate 191.1>110.9, citrate IS 195.1>112.9, oxalate 88.9>60.85, oxalate IS 90.9>61.9 using a Waters TQD in electrospray-negative mode. Results Oxalate and 13C2 oxalate were eluted at 0.29 min; citrate and citrate-d4 were eluted at 0.52 min. Mean recovery was 100% for oxalate and 103% for citrate; lower limit of quantification of oxalate was 60  µmol/L and 50  µmol/L for citrate. Oxalate was linear up to 1388  µmol/L; citrate was linear up to 4762.5  µmol/L. Oxalate was found to be affected by ion suppression (matrix effect: −23 to +65%) but was compensated for by the internal standard used in all cases. The coefficient of variation of the assay in urine for oxalate was <7% for oxalate and 5% for citrate. Discussion We have developed a rapid assay for LC-MS/MS measurement of urinary oxalate and citrate in a routine clinical laboratory. It is simple, reproducible and easy to perform.


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