Development of a high performance liquid chromatographic assay measuring mezlocillin in serum or tissue.

1993 
Objective: This study evaluated the blood and uterine tissue concentration of mezlocillin, a broadspectrum penicillin. Methods: We adapted a liquid chromatographic method to measure mezlocillin in serum and tissue. Mezlocillin reference standard was diluted in water, chromatographed on a reversed phase C18 column eluted at 1.5 ml/min with acetonitrile and phosphate buffer (1:3 v:v), and detected spectrophotometrically at210 nm. Mezlocillinwas administered to 14 premenopausalwomen scheduled to undergo vaginal hysterectomy. Each patient received a 4 g IV infusion of the drug 30 to 60 min prior to surgery. During surgery, tissue was removed from the uterine cervix and blood was obtained for assay ofmezlocillin content. Results: Chromatography of the mezlocillin standard furnished a discrete peak with a retention time of 2.4 min. The sensitivity of the assay was 0.1 pg/ml with a linear response up to 100 g/ml. The correlation coefficient for the standard curve was 0.9997.When reference standardwas diluted in pooled human serum, the assaywas complicated by interfering compounds. These were removed by ether extraction. The sensitivity of the assay performed in serum was 3 Cg/ml. Serum samples contained from 81.2 to 358 pg ofmezlocillin/ml with an average serum concentration of207.5 g/ml. When serum containing a known amount of mezlocillin was homogenized for a period of time similar to that required to homogenize tissue samples, a detectable loss of drug was observed and was applied as a correction factor to the measured tissue levels. After correction, the average tissue level was 117.2 g/ml and ranged from 27% to 98% ofthe serum levels. Conclusions:The serum concentration ofmezlocillin afterIV infusion of4 gwas greater than that required to inhibit the majority ofthe most significant organisms responsible for post-hysterectomy sepsis. Although tissue levels appeared to be consistently lower than serum levels, they could be expected to provide an inhibitory effect against many of the bacterial strains that contaminate the surgical site. (C) 1993 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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