

Published: Journal of Analytical Toxicology, Volume
23,
Number 6,
October 1999,
pp.409-415
A Retrospective Study of Buprenorphine and Norbuprenorphine in Human Hair
After Multiple Doses
Diana G. Wilkins, Douglas E. Rollins, Angelique
S. Valdez, Atsuhiro Mizuno, Gerald G. Krueger, and Edward J. Cone
The analysis of hair has been proposed as a tool for monitoring drug-treatment
compliance. This study was performed to determine if buprenorphine (BPR) and norbuprenorphine
(NBPR) could be detected in human hair after controlled administration of drug
and to determine if segmental analysis of hair was an accurate record of the dosing
history. Subjects with dark hair (six males, six females) received 8 mg sublingual
BPR for a maximum of 180 days. Single hair collections were made once after BPR
treatment and stored at 20°C until analysis. Hair was aligned scalp-end
to tip and then segmented in 3-cm sections. For this study, it was assumed that
the mean hair growth rate was 1.0 cm/month. Deuterated internal standard was added
to hair segments (220 mg of hair) and digested overnight at room temperature
with 1N NaOH. Specimens were extracted with a liquidliquid procedure and
analyzed by liquid chromatographytandem mass spectrometry. The limits of
quantitation for BPR and NBPR were 3 pg/mg and 5 pg/mg, respectively, for 20 mg
of hair. BPR and NBPR concentrations were highest for all subjects in hair segments
estimated to correspond to the subjects period of drug treatment. With one
exception, NBPR was present in higher concentrations in hair than was the parent
compound. BPR concentrations in hair segments ranged from 3.1 pg/mg to 123.8 pg/mg.
NBPR concentrations ranged from 4.8 pg/mg to 1517.8 pg/mg. In one subject, BPR
and NBPR were not detected in any hair segment. In some subjects, BPR and NBPR
were detected in hair segments that did not correspond to the period of drug treatment,
suggesting that drug movement may have occurred by diffusion in sweat and other
mechanisms. The data from this study also indicate that there is a high degree
of intersubject variability in measured concentration of BPR and NBPR in hair
segments, even when subjects receive the same dose for an equivalent number of
treatment days. Future prospective studies involving controlled drug administration
will be necessary to evaluate whether hair can serve as an accurate historical
record of variations in the pattern of drug use.
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