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1.
Clin Chim Acta ; 559: 119688, 2024 Jun 01.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38670521

The presence of ostarine, a selective androgen receptor modulator (SARM) in an athlete's sample constitutes one of the most frequent anti-doping rules violation. It is possible to challenge this violation but it is the athlete who has to demonstrate he / she is innocent. The conditions to evidence no fault or negligence are mostly based on 2 points: 1. the athlete or his/her legal representative must present verified circumstances of contamination and the source of contamination must be identified; and 2. there must be verified claims by the athlete about the fact that he / she did not knowingly take the prohibited substance, i.e. that the violation was not intentional. During a 2-weeks period, a male athlete tested two times positive for ostarine in urine (<0.1 ng/ml) and he challenged these results. His hair and nail tests returned negative (LOQ at 0.5 pg/mg). He admitted using two neoprene hamstring sleeves of another athlete who confessed abusing ostarine. This was confirmed in his hair (190 pg/mg), his fingernail clippings (780 pg/mg) and his toenail clippings (45 pg/mg). To document the presence of ostarine in the hamstring sleeves and therefore possible drug transfer, the hamstring sleeves were analysed. Ostarine was identified in 12 different selected pieces (about 1 g) of the sleeves at concentrations ranging from 3 to 142 pg/g. Sport authorities (USADA) agreed that the most likely source of contamination was the hamstring sleeves, thus confirming the scenario of drug transfer and gave the athlete a no fault.


Athletes , Doping in Sports , Humans , Doping in Sports/prevention & control , Male , Sweat/chemistry , Adult , Substance Abuse Detection/methods
3.
J Forensic Sci ; 69(3): 1106-1113, 2024 May.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38481368

Evidence of an insulin overdose is very complicated in the medico-legal field. The analysis and subsequent interpretation of results is complex, especially when treating postmortem blood samples. The instability of insulin, the special pre-analytical conditions and the absence of specific analytical methods has led most laboratories not to analyze insulin in their routine with a consequent underestimation of cases. This paper aims to assess the difficulties associated with the analytical characterization of insulin by describing a case that typically represents most of the inconveniences encountered following a suspected insulin overdose. The case concerns a man found dead at home by his brother. After an external examination, which did not reveal a specific cause of death, toxicological analysis was requested which did not reveal any substance of toxicological interest. Only 9 months later, it was reported to the toxicologist that the subject was diabetic, on insulin lispro treatment and that three empty syringes were found next to his body. Following analysis by LC-high-resolution mass spectrometry, the presence of insulin lispro at a concentration of 1.1 ng/mL, a therapeutic concentration, was evidenced. Despite the low concentration found, overdose cannot be excluded and this paper will describe the criteria evaluated to reach this conclusion. This case highlights that the interpretation of a postmortem insulin concentration is very complex and requires the evaluation of various elements including the circumstances of death, the subject's medical history, the interval between death and sampling and the sample storage.


Drug Overdose , Forensic Toxicology , Hypoglycemic Agents , Insulin Lispro , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Chromatography, Liquid , Diabetes Mellitus , Forensic Toxicology/methods , Hypoglycemic Agents/poisoning , Insulin , Insulin Lispro/poisoning , Mass Spectrometry
4.
J Pharm Biomed Anal ; 243: 116078, 2024 Jun 15.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38489958

Kratom (Mitragyna speciosa) is a species of large tree that grows in Southeast Asia and is part of the Rubiaceae family. Its fresh leaves are harvested for their medicinal properties and used for their psychoactive effects. Kratom contains many biologically active alkaloids, including mitragynine and 7-OH-mitragynine, which are considered the two most important psychoactive components and constitute approximately 66% and 2% of the total alkaloid content. Other alkaloids are present in the plant, such as speciogynine, speciociliatine and paynantheine, but have less psychoactive activity. Over the past decade, the sale of kratom powder has increased on the Internet. This led to a significant increase in forensic cases. Given the lack of data existing in the literature, and the total absence of data in nails, the authors report a study to determine the best target alkaloids for documenting kratom consumption in this matrix. Fingernail clippings from a supposed kratom powder user were analyzed after liquid-liquid extraction, chromatography separation using a HSS C18 column and performed on an ultra-high performance liquid chromatography coupled to a tandem mass spectrometer. In the specimen, mitragynine was quantified at 229 pg/mg, speciogynine and paynantheine were both quantified at 2 pg/mg, and speciociliatine was quantified at 19 pg/mg. 7-OH-mitragynine was not detected. The interpretation of these concentrations is complex, since there is currently no reference in the literature, as this is the first identification of mitragynine and other kratom alkaloids in nails. Nevertheless, in view of the high concentration of mitragynine, the subject seems to be a repetitive user of kratom. According to the measured concentrations, it seems that mitragynine remains the best target to document kratom consumption, but the identification of the other alkaloids would enhance the specificity of the test.


Mitragyna , Secologanin Tryptamine Alkaloids , Nails/chemistry , Powders , Secologanin Tryptamine Alkaloids/analysis , Secologanin Tryptamine Alkaloids/chemistry , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid , Plant Extracts/chemistry , Mitragyna/chemistry
5.
Clin Chim Acta ; 557: 117879, 2024 Apr 15.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38499138

The presence of ostarine, a selective androgen receptor modulator (SARM) in an athlete's urine specimen constitutes one of the most frequent anti-doping rules violation as the drug is listed as a member of the S1.2 class "other anabolic agents" of the World Anti-doping Agency Prohibited List, forbidden in- and out-competition. It is possible to challenge this violation but it is at the charge of the athlete to prove innocence. The conditions to evidence no fault or negligence are mostly based on 2 points: 1. the athlete must present verified circumstances of contamination and the source of contamination must be identified; and 2. there must be verified claims by the athlete that the violation was not intentional. Some months before the Olympic games, a female athlete was suspended by a national anti-doping agency because of an adverse analytical finding for ostarine. She claimed that her violation was due to drug transfer when kissing her boyfriend, who did not inform her about his ostarine daily intake. To document this claim (excretion of ostarine in oral fluid in sufficient amounts), a male volunteer ingested 17.3 mg of ostarine (dose verified by 1H NMR). Oral fluid was collected over 8 h using the NeoSal™ collection device and was tested by liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry. Maximal ostarine concentration was 468 ng/mL at T + 15 min, which can also be partially attributed to mouth contamination. Ostarine was detectable during the whole period of test, with concentrations at 1-2 ng/mL after T + 4 h. These results support drug transfer during kissing and subsequent possible contamination of the partner.


Anilides , Doping in Sports , Humans , Male , Female , Chromatography, Liquid/methods , Androgens , Administration, Oral , Substance Abuse Detection/methods
7.
Drug Test Anal ; 2024 Jan 20.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38243699

Analysis of hair collected from putrefied or skeletal bodies is always complex and must take into account several pitfalls, such as external contamination and contamination by biological fluids. This work presents a case of particular complexity. A skeletonized body was discovered on a country road. A tuft of brown hair, detached from the scalp, irregular in length, non-oriented, in contact with soil and vegetation, was removed. An anthropological examination was carried out and genetic samples were taken from the right femoral shaft. After about 10 washes with warm water and dichloromethane, the tuft of hair was analyzed without segmentation. General unknown screening was performed by liquid chromatography system coupled to a high-resolution mass spectrometry (LC-HRMS) after incubation in pH 9.5 borate buffer and liquid-liquid extraction. Specific Multiple Reaction Monitoring (MRM) methods for date rape drugs were carried out by liquid chromatography system coupled to a tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). The anthropological examination allowed to determine that the victim was a female individual, over 60 years old, the death dating from 3 months to 1 year. Comparison of the DNA results with the Missing Persons Index led to the identification, a 60-year-old woman who disappeared 5 months earlier. Hair analysis showed the presence of oxazepam (361 pg/mg), nordiazepam (54 pg/mg), and alimemazine (5 pg/mg). The interpretation of these concentrations is extremely difficult due to the risk of degradation of the hair cuticle during prolonged stay in the soil, as well as of contamination by putrefactive fluids. The authors discuss the value of using multiple biological and non-biological matrices in this context to improve the interpretation of the results.

8.
J Pharm Biomed Anal ; 239: 115915, 2024 Feb 15.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38091820

Roxadustat is an oral inhibitor of hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) prolyl hydroxylase, which increases endogenous erythropoiesis. WADA has included roxadustat and other HIF stabilizers on its list of prohibited substances. We describe here the case of an elite athlete (female, 31 years old, 168 cm and 53 kg) with an adverse analytical finding (AAF) with concentration of roxadustat in her urine at 0.289 ng/mL in the A sample and 0.529 ng/mL in the B sample (83% higher than A). A stability study was carried out, showing total stability of roxadustat at this concentration in urine exposed to light for 50 h, so photoisomerization degradation cannot explain the difference in concentration. Her urine had been completely negative in a control test carried out three days previously, while roxadustat had been shown to be present in urine for at least 20 days after administration of pharmacologically effective doses to an athlete. Hair concentration was 0.39 and 0.35 pg/mg in the segments corresponding to the presumed period of intake, with few adjacent segments also positive (0.29-0.33 pg/mg), likely explained by cosmetic treatments. Concentrations found in a patient treated with a pharmacologically active dose (between 100 and 120 mg 3 days a week) were more than 100 times higher (between 41 and 57 pg/mg). Numerous supplements and pharmaceuticals taken by the athlete were analyzed. Only collagen powder showed the presence of roxadustat, at a very low but highly variable concentration (100 pg/g-1000 pg/g). A female volunteer (58 years old, 169 cm and 65 kg), taking this powder at the same doses as the athlete (10 g of powder 5 times for 6 days) presented 7 roxadustat-positive urine samples (although lower than those observed in the athlete) out of 34 sampled over 7 days, the difference in powder sampling location, age, weight, height, pharmacokinetic parameters variability and level of sporting activity between the athlete and the volunteer probably explaining the difference in concentrations observed. All these results could be consistent with an AAF due to contamination by dietary supplements, which are becoming increasingly common due to the current exposome of athletes in our society.


Glycine , Renal Insufficiency, Chronic , Humans , Female , Adult , Middle Aged , Powders , Isoquinolines/pharmacokinetics , Dietary Supplements
9.
Drug Test Anal ; 16(2): 162-167, 2024 Feb.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37290775

Pediatric poisoning represents a serious problem all around the world. Abuse or neglect of children by adults must be highlighted in children exposed to drugs to which they would not normally have access. Usually, segmental hair analysis would allow in these contexts to determine whether the exposure was unique or repetitive. Hair and nail samples from a 9-month-old girl were received in our laboratory for analysis, after the child was hospitalized due to severe dehydration caused by her mother's neglect. At the admission, flecainide, an antiarrhythmic never prescribed to the child, was identified in the daughter urine. Using an LC-MS/MS method, flecainide tested positive in the child's hair at the following concentrations: 66 pg/mg (root to 1 cm), 61 pg/mg (1-2 cm), and 125 pg/mg (2-3 cm). Traces below the limit of quantification (1 pg/mg) were also present in the nail clippings. These concentrations are much lower than those obtained in adults under daily treatment. Given the different pharmacokinetic and dynamic parameters in children, the different rate of hair growth, and the greater porosity of the hair, which makes it more prone to external contamination, the interpretation of hair findings in children remains very complicated. In this case, it can be assumed that the presence of the drug in the urine indicates systemic incorporation and that administration had occurred for some months (three positive segments). The interpretation of hair tests from young children needs a global review of all the findings, as a positive result cannot stand alone to claim repetitive exposures.


Flecainide , Keratins , Humans , Child , Infant, Newborn , Adult , Female , Child, Preschool , Infant , Chromatography, Liquid , Tandem Mass Spectrometry , Pharmaceutical Preparations/analysis , Substance Abuse Detection/methods
10.
Med Sci Law ; 64(1): 72-76, 2024 Jan.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37161267

The presence of a prohibited substance or its metabolites or its markers in an athlete's sample constitutes the more frequent anti-doping rules violation. In the world anti-doping code, it is indicated (point 10.5) that if someone establishes in an individual case that the athlete bears no fault or negligence, then the otherwise applicable period of ineligibility shall be eliminated. The conditions that have to be met to fix the no fault or negligence evidence are described in several other points of the code. The following two points are of paramount importance: 1. the athlete or his/her legal representative must present verified circumstances of contamination and the source of contamination must be identified; and 2. there must be verified claims by the athlete about the fact that he/she did not knowingly take the prohibited substance, i.e., that the violation was not intentional.In recent years, several cases of contamination involving drug transfer during intimate moments have been reported. This later situation was first reported in 2009 with the Richard Gasquet case. Since that time, several athletes have been allowed to return to competition with no charge based on strong evidence that the source of contamination was drug transfer during intimate moments. As some of these cases are public and because the author performed hair tests for the majority of the international athletes involved in such procedures, the strategy of the defence and the scientific bases of discussion are reviewed in this article.


Doping in Sports , Female , Humans , Male , Athletes , Drug Contamination , Hair
11.
J Pharm Biomed Anal ; 239: 115888, 2024 Feb 15.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38096632

Clomiphene is a selective estrogen receptor modulator. It is indicated for the treatment of female infertility issues but in sport, it can be misused to stimulate endogenous testosterone secretion in men. Therefore, it has been prohibited at all times by the World Anti-doping Agency. The aim of this study was to get data to be able to interpret concentrations in athletes. A healthy volunteer (male, 62 years-old) ingested a single therapeutic dose of clomiphene (Clomid™, 50 mg). Strands of hair (blond, 4 cm) were collected one month after the ingestion. Body hair (beard, axillary, pubic and chest hair), and finger and toenails were collected over 4-5 months. A previous method was modified to identify and quantify clomiphene in keratinous matrices. 30 mg of specimen were sonicated and incubated in 1 mL of methanol, in presence of 200 pg of clomiphene-D5 (internal standard). After centrifugation and evaporation of the organic phase, the samples were analyzed using LC-MS/MS. Linearity was verified in hair and nail clippings between 1 and 500 pg/mg. The limits of detection and quantification were determined at 0.3 and 1 pg/mg respectively. The study demonstrated that clomiphene tested positive in all the analyzed specimens at 9 pg/mg in head hair, from 28 to 486 pg/mg (body hair) and from 4 to 57 pg/mg (nails). Clomiphene was identified for the first time in multiple keratinous matrices. This study demonstrated that a single oral therapeutic dose is detectable in keratinous matrices over a long period of time.


Doping in Sports , Liquid Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry , Humans , Male , Female , Middle Aged , Chromatography, Liquid/methods , Keratins , Tandem Mass Spectrometry/methods , Clomiphene , Hair
13.
J Anal Toxicol ; 2023 Dec 29.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38155345

Coca tea is a popular drink in some countries of South America where it is presented as a safe energy preparation, based on a limited total content of cocaine of about 3 to 5 mg. Tea bags can be bought with no legal considerations in these countries both by locals and tourists but its consumption can have consequences when consumed overseas. Driving under the influence of cocaine is banned in most places in the world and can be documented by oral fluid testing. A study was implemented with coca tea bags (Coca & Muna) purchased in Peru, after a French attorney at law contacted the laboratory to assess the involvement of coca tea in the positive oral fluid results of a driver. Ten healthy volunteers consumed 250 mL of coca tea containing 4.5 mg of cocaine. No volunteer reported any change in behavioral effects after consumption of the coca tea. Oral fluid was collected with a swab (FloqSwab™, Copan) over 8 hours to follow the elimination of cocaine and its major metabolites (benzoylecgonine and ecgonine methylester). This is the procedure used by the French police. All samples were analyzed by UHPLC-MS-MS after Quantisal™ buffer desorption. As the device does not allow measurement of the amount of collected fluid, the results are qualitative. This is in accordance with the French law that requires a yes or no response about the presence of cocaine, with a minimum required performance level of 10 ng/ml of cocaine or benzoylecgonine. Parent cocaine was identified for 30 to 120 min. Benzoylecgonine and ecgonine methylester were identified between 1 and 8 hours, with a large inter-individual variation. Although it is generally accepted that a 4 to 5 mg cocaine dose has no significant pharmacological effect, the consumption of coca tea can lead to the suspension of a person's driving license due to a positive oral fluid test.

15.
Int J Legal Med ; 137(6): 1743-1750, 2023 Nov.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37542673

The dead body of a 54-year-old man was found at home by his partner. He was off work due to depression. A letter with suicidal intention was present on the scene. He was known to be a heavy drinker, and near the body, an empty bottle of whisky was found. In addition, 2 empty blisters of Eliquis (apixaban) 5 mg, corresponding to 40 tablets, were identified. Apixaban is an oral anticoagulant, acting as a factor Xa inhibitor. Autopsy findings were mostly unremarkable, except numerous bruises and some superficial self-inflected wounds. Histology showed hematomas of calyces and renal pelvis and in the liver, several areas of perivenular haemorrhagic necrosis. Others organs were congestive. Femoral venous blood alcohol was 0.11 g/L. In femoral venous blood, a toxic concentration of apixaban was measured at 1184 ng/mL using LC-MS/MS. Other drugs found at therapeutic concentrations included diazepam (99 ng/mL), nordiazepam (171 ng/mL), flecainide (447 ng/mL), and mianserine (65 ng/mL). Using liquid chromatography coupled to high-resolution mass spectrometry, 2 metabolites were identified, O-desmethyl-apixaban (61.8% of the apixaban response) and hydroxyl-apixaban (4.5% of the apixaban response). Long-term therapy was confirmed by a concentration of 10390 pg/mg in pubic hair.

16.
J Anal Toxicol ; 47(8): 703-708, 2023 Nov 01.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37522606

Clomiphene or clomifene is a selective estrogen receptor modulator used to treat female fertility in case of ovulatory dysfunction. In sport, clomiphene is prohibited at all times for use by athletes and is listed in the section S4.2 (hormone and metabolic modulators) by the World Anti-Doping Agency. Indeed, clomiphene can indirectly increase testosterone levels in the body and can mitigate some side effects of synthetic steroid abuse. Despite its prescription to millions of subjects, its detection in human hair or nail clippings has never been reported. The aim of this study was to develop a specific method to identify clomiphene in hair and nail clippings by liquid chromatography-quadrupole tandem mass spectrometry. The procedure was then applied in a case of challenged doping results. The method involves sonication/incubation for 1 h of 30 mg of pulverized material in 1 mL of methanol in the presence of 2 ng diazepam-d5 used as internal standard. The chromatographic separation was performed using a HSS C18 column with a 15 min gradient elution. After spiking blank hair and nail with the corresponding amounts of clomiphene, linearity was verified from 1 to 500 pg/mg (r2 = 0.9994 and 0.9995 for hair and nail, respectively). The limit of detection was estimated at 0.3 pg/mg for both matrices. No interference was noted from endogenous compounds, particularly steroids. Clomiphene was identified at 85 and 20 pg/mg in the pubic hair and the fingernail clippings, respectively, of a male athlete challenging an adverse analytical finding.


Clomiphene , Keratins , Humans , Male , Female , Clomiphene/analysis , Keratins/analysis , Nails/chemistry , Hair/chemistry , Chromatography, Liquid/methods , Steroids
17.
J Anal Toxicol ; 47(6): 552-556, 2023 Jul 22.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37279962

3-Hydroxyphencyclidine (3-OH-PCP) is a hydroxy derivative of phencyclidine, synthesized in 1978 to investigate the structure-activity relationship of phencyclidine derivates. In vitro studies have shown that 3-OH-PCP, like phencyclidine, acts on the N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor and has a higher affinity for this receptor than phencyclidine. The authors report the case of a 38-year-old man, known for drug addiction, found dead at home with two plastic bags of powders found near his body. Using liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry, peripheral blood toxicological analysis revealed consumption of 3-OH-PCP with a concentration of 3-OH-PCP being 524 ng/mL. Blood also tested positive for nordiazepam, methylphenidate, amisulpride, methadone and benzoylecgonine, all at concentrations near those observed after recreational abuse. The blood concentration of 3-OH-PCP is the highest ever reported in the literature. Hair testing also revealed 3-OH-PCP, at 174 pg/mg, which may correspond to a chronic consumption of this molecule. A nuclear magnetic resonance analysis of the two powders highlighted 3-OH-PCP and 5-methoxy-dimethyltryptamine, estimated to have a purity of 85.4 and 91.3%, respectively, using the Electronic Reference To access In vivo Concentrations method.


Phencyclidine , Substance-Related Disorders , Male , Humans , Adult , Powders/analysis , Hair/chemistry
19.
J Forensic Sci ; 68(3): 1077-1083, 2023 May.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36994942

Insulin glargine is a long-acting insulin analog that is converted after enzymatic cleavage of the arginine pair of the ß-chain into its main metabolite M1 (21A -Gly-insulin), which is responsible for the hypoglycemic activity. In all the overdose cases described in the literature, only M1 concentrations have been reported, whereas insulin glargine was always absent or below the limit of quantitation. In this study, we present a case of suicide of a young nurse by injection of insulin glargine in which the parent molecule was found at a toxic concentration in blood. The determination and the discrimination of insulin glargine from human insulin and other synthetic analogs in the blood specimen were performed by liquid chromatography coupled to high-resolution mass spectrometry (Waters XEVO G2-XS QToF) and extraction after precipitation in the presence of bovine insulin (internal standard), with a mixture of acetonitrile/methanol +1% formic acid followed by purification on solid phase extraction cartridges C18. Glargine insulin tested highly positive in the blood with a concentration of 1.06 mg/L. Due to the difficulty in obtaining a M1 pure standard, the metabolite could not be dosed. This unique presence of the parent molecule, reported for the first time, can be explained by inter-individual variability in the rate of conversion to metabolite. Intravenous injection versus subcutaneous injection can also explain the presence of insulin glargine. Finally, the dose injected may have been so high that saturation of the proteolytic enzymes responsible for conversion to M1 should have occurred.


Drug Overdose , Hypoglycemic Agents , Animals , Cattle , Humans , Insulin Glargine/metabolism , Insulin , Insulin, Long-Acting , Chromatography, Liquid/methods
20.
J Anal Toxicol ; 47(5): 417-428, 2023 May 19.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36847154

The value of hair in forensic toxicology has already been widely demonstrated. It offers a much wider detection window than other matrices, and its segmental analysis allows the documentation of a single, occasional or regular consumption of a large number of molecules. To date, considerable efforts are being made to achieve very high sensitivity using increasingly effective techniques in the forensic analysis of hair (gas chromatography with electron ionization mass spectrometry (GC--EI-MS); gas chromatography with chemical ionization mass spectrometry (GC--CI-MS); gas chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (GC--MS-MS); high or ultra performance liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (HPLC-MS-MS and UPLC-MS-MS)). Since the early 2000s, work has been carried out to analyze hair using matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization (MALDI) coupled with imaging mass spectrometry (IMS). Intact, cut or pulverized, human head hairs are analyzed in all their forms. With a simplified and rapid sample preparation protocol, MALDI-IMS appears to be an attractive option for the forensic interpretation of hair analysis. The high spatial resolution clearly competes with conventional methods and strand segmentation. This article provides a complete overview on MALDI techniques used and its applications to better understand the pre-analytical and the analytical parts in the hair analysis.


Hair , Tandem Mass Spectrometry , Humans , Chromatography, Liquid , Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization , Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry , Hair/chemistry
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