Determination of retinol and retinyl esters in human plasma by high-performance liquid chromatography with automated column switching and ultraviolet detection

J Chromatogr B Biomed Sci Appl. 2001 Feb 25;751(2):265-75. doi: 10.1016/s0378-4347(00)00481-3.

Abstract

A HPLC method with automated column switching and UV detection is described for the simultaneous determination of retinol and major retinyl esters (retinyl palmitate, retinyl stearate, retinyl oleate and retinyl linoleate) in human plasma. Plasma (0.2 ml) was deproteinized by adding ethanol (1.5 ml) containing the internal standard retinyl propionate. Following centrifugation the supernatant was directly injected onto the pre-column packed with LiChrospher 100 RP-18 using 1.2% ammonium acetate-acetic acid-ethanol (80:1:20, v/v) as mobile phase. The elution strength of the ethanol containing sample solution was reduced by on-line supply of 1% ammonium acetate-acetic acid-ethanol (100:2:4, v/v). The retained retinol and retinyl esters were then transferred to the analytical column (Superspher 100 RP-18, endcapped) in the backflush mode and chromatographed under isocratic conditions using acetonitrile-methanol-ethanol-2-propanol (1:1:1:1, v/v) as mobile phase. Compounds of interest were detected at 325 nm. The method was linear in the range 2.5-2000 ng/ml with a limit of quantification for retinol and retinyl esters of 2.5 ng/ml. Mean recoveries from plasma were 93.4-96.5% for retinol (range 100-1000 ng/ml) and 92.7-96.0% for retinyl palmitate (range 5-1000 ng/ml). Inter-assay precision was < or =5.1% and < or =6.3% for retinol and retinyl palmitate, respectively. The method was successfully applied to more than 2000 human plasma samples from clinical studies. Endogenous levels of retinol and retinyl esters determined in female volunteers were in good accordance with published data.

MeSH terms

  • Automation
  • Calibration
  • Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid / methods*
  • Esters
  • Sensitivity and Specificity
  • Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet
  • Vitamin A / blood*

Substances

  • Esters
  • Vitamin A