Abstract
[31P] nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy was used to analyze body fluids from patients treated with ifosfamide (IF). This technique, which requires no labeled drug, allows a direct study of the biological sample with no need for extraction or derivatization and a simultaneous detection and quantification of all the different phosphorated metabolites in a single analysis. In urine, isophosphoramide mustard was detected in addition to the already known human urinary compounds [i.e., unchanged IF, carboxyifosfamide, 2-dechloroethylifosfamide, 3-dechloroethylifosfamide, ketoifosfamide]. 2,3-Didechloroethylifosfamide itself was not found, but two of its degradation compounds were detected, thus showing a minor route of didechloroethylation of IF in humans. Several other signals corresponding to unknown metabolites or to degradation compounds of IF metabolites were observed. None of them corresponded to IF-activated metabolites (4-hydroxyifosfamide, aldoifosfamide) or to conjugates of IF or its metabolites with mesna. The urinary excretion of IF and metabolites over 24 h amounted to 39 to 50% of the injected dose. Unmetabolized IF was the major compound in 0- to 8-h and 8- to 16-h fractions. 2-Dechloroethylifosfamide and 3-dechloroethylifosfamide were the main metabolites detected in each 8-h fraction. The two unknown compounds at 19.16 ppm and 16.06 ppm represented a non-negligible fraction of the excretion, above that of carboxyifosfamide. Only unchanged IF could be detected in plasma samples. Unmetabolized IF and 3-dechloroethylifosfamide were found in a cerebrospinal fluid sample. Neither IF nor IF metabolites could be observed in the corresponding plasma sample. This indicates a long persistence of these compounds in cerebrospinal fluid.
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