Stereospecific gas chromatographic method for determination of methadone in serum

Abstract
Rac-Methadone is used clinically for the chronic maintenance treatment of heroin addiction and for the relief of pain. As the pharmacological activity of methadone is due primarily to the (−)-(R)-enantiomer, stereospecific measurements of methadone serum concentrations in methadone-treated patients are expected to be more relevant for clinical studies than earlier described total drug measurements. This study describes a stereospecific gas chromatographic (GC) method for the determination of methadone in serum. The extracted methadone was derivatizised with (−)-menthyl chloroformate. The diastereometric derivatives were analysed by GC on a capillary column and detected with a nitrogen-phosphorus detector. The resolution factor obtained for the methadone enantiomers was 1.1 with a relatively short time of analysis (30 min). By analysing the pure (−)-(R)-enantiomer, no racemization was seen during the analysis. The lower limit of quantitation was 75 nmol/1 for each enantiomer. Measurements of the ratio between (−)-(R)- and (+)-(S)-methadone concentrations in serum from five methadone-treated patients showed interindividual differences (range 0.5–1.1). The patient results correlated well with those from another GC method measuring total methadone.