Nakazawa H, Riggs C E, Egorin M J, Redwood S M, Bachur N R, Bhatnagar R, Ito Y
J Chromatogr. 1984 May 11;307(2):323-33. doi: 10.1016/s0378-4347(00)84103-1.
Extraction of doxorubicin (adriamycin) and daunorubicin and their metabolites from human urine was attempted utilizing the horizontal flow-through coil planet centrifuge. Partition coefficients of the drugs for various combinations of non-aqueous phases and aqueous salt solutions were determined. Optimal coefficients for adriamycin and daunorubicin were achieved with n-butanol-0.3 M disodium hydrogen phosphate. Extraction efficiencies of the drugs from human urine comparable to those obtained by standard resin column techniques could be realized by employing the n-butanol-urine (containing 0.3 M disodium hydrogen phosphate) system in the coil planet centrifuge, at flow-rates of 500-600 ml/h, and at 650 rpm revolutional speed. Small quantities of drugs and metabolites could be continuously concentrated into small volumes of the n-butanol phase from large volumes of salted urine. The versatility of the technique was demonstrated by its application to extraction of aclacinomycin A, a novel anthracycline antitumor agent, and its metabolites from human urine.