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Published:
Journal of Analytical Toxicology,
ISSN 0146-4760,
Volume 30, Issue 4, May 2006,
pp.287-292
CASE REPORT: Tissue Distribution of Quetiapine in 20 Cases
in Virginia
Dwight D. Flammia[3], Tara Valouch[1], and Susan
Venuti[2]
[1]Virginia Department of Forensic Science and
[2]Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, 6600 Northside High School Road, Roanoke,
Virginia 24019
[3]Virginia Department of Forensic Science, 700 North 5th Street, Richmond,
Virginia 23219
Quetiapine fumarate (Seroquel®) is a dibenzothiazepine psychotropic
agent that was introduced in 1997 for treating psychoses. Quetiapine is being
found with increasing frequency in postmortem cases in Virginia. We report the
postmortem results and histories of 20 quetiapine cases from the Office of the
Chief Medical Examiner in Virginia covering the period 1999 through 2004. Quetiapine
was extracted from blood using a basic drug solid-phase extraction (SPE) and
identified by full scan electron impact gas chromatography–mass spectrometry
(GC–MS). Quetiapine quantification was accomplished by forming the trimethylsilyl
derivative with bis(trimethylsilyl)trifluoracetamide/trimethylchlorosilane and
using selected ion monitoring GC–MS. The quetiapine trimethylsilyl derivative
ions acquired were m/z 210, 239, and 322. Methapyrilene was the internal standard,
and ions m/z 97 and 58 were monitored. The method was linear from 0.1 to 5.0
mg/L with a limit of quantitation of 0.1 mg/L. The quetiapine mean and range
of concentrations found in each tissue are as follows: peripheral blood, 7.7
mg/L (0.14–37 mg/L, n = 17); heart blood, 23.63 mg/L (0.53–76 mg/L,
n = 4); liver, 91 mg/Kg (1.1–510 mg/Kg, n = 19); bile, 44 mg/L (6.0–96
mg/L, n = 4); urine, 15 mg/L (1.9–37 mg/L, n = 8); gastric, 897 mg total
(3.5–3960 mg, n = 7); and vitreous, 1.4 mg/L (0.2–3.2 mg/L, n =
5). The average of all blood concentrations in 18 cases in which quetiapine
contributed to the cause of death was 7.95 mg/L (0.4–76 mg/L). The manner
of death in 13 of those cases was suicide, two were undetermined, and three
were accidents. In two cases in which quetiapine was an incidental finding,
the blood concentrations were 0.14 and 1.0 mg/L. Quetiapine and other toxicological
findings are presented with the cause and manner of death to assist in interpreting
future quetiapine findings in postmortem samples.
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