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In vitro and in vivo metabolism studies of dimethazine
Authors:Lore Geldof  Eva Tudela  Leen Lootens  Jasper van Lysebeth  Phillip Meuleman  Geert Leroux‐Roels  Peter van Eenoo  Koen Deventer
Affiliation:1. Doping Control Laboratory, Ghent University, Zwijnaarde, Belgium;2. Center for Vaccinology, Ghent University and Hospital, Ghent, Belgium
Abstract:The use of anabolic steroids is prohibited in sports. Effective control is done by monitoring their metabolites in urine samples collected from athletes. Ethical objections however restrict the use of designer steroids in human administration studies. To overcome these problems alternative in vitro and in vivo models were developed to identify metabolites and to assure a fast response by anti‐doping laboratories to evolutions on the steroid market. In this study human liver microsomes and an uPA+/+‐SCID chimeric mouse model were used to elucidate the metabolism of a steroid product called ‘Xtreme DMZ’. This product contains the designer steroid dimethazine (DMZ), which consists of two methasterone molecules linked by an azine group. In the performed stability study, degradation from dimethazine to methasterone was observed. By a combination of LC‐High Resolution Mass Spectrometry (HRMS) and GC‐MS(/MS) analysis methasterone and six other dimethazine metabolites (M1–M6), which are all methasterone metabolites, could be detected besides the parent compound in both models. The phase II metabolism of dimethazine was also investigated in the mouse urine samples. Only metabolites M1 and M2 were exclusively detected in the glucuro‐conjugated fraction; all other compounds were also found in the free fraction. For effective control of DMZ misuse in doping control samples, screening for methasterone and methasterone metabolites should be sufficient. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Keywords:steroids  metabolism  in vitro and in vivo studies  GC‐MS  LC‐HRMS
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