Peptilotbeta
← All papers
Limited · humanother

Simplifying and expanding the screening for peptides <2 kDa by direct urine injection, liquid chromatography, and ion mobility mass spectrometry.

Thomas A, Görgens C, Guddat S, Thieme D, Dellanna F, Schänzer W, Thevis M.
Journal of separation science · December 15, 2015
Plain-language summary

This study developed and validated an analytical method for detecting a broad panel of 18 performance-enhancing peptides (molecular weight <2 kDa) in human urine, as defined by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) prohibited list. The method uses direct urine injection—bypassing complex sample preparation—coupled with liquid chromatography and ion mobility time-of-flight mass spectrometry (IM-TOFMS). The researchers reported limits of detection (LOD) ranging from 50 to 500 pg/mL, well below WADA's minimum required performance level of 2 ng/mL. The method demonstrated acceptable precision (imprecision <20%) and linearity across a 0–10 ng/mL working range. Stability testing identified –20°C as the appropriate storage temperature for urine samples. As a proof-of-concept, the method was applied to real elimination study urine samples from individuals who had administered GHRP-2, GHRP-6, or LHRH, successfully detecting these compounds. Key limitations include the small number of human subjects used in the elimination studies, which were primarily intended to demonstrate analytical feasibility rather than investigate pharmacokinetics or clinical effects. The study is a methodological/analytical validation paper focused on anti-doping screening, not a clinical or therapeutic investigation.

Why this grade: The study involves a small number of human subjects solely for proof-of-concept analytical validation, not to assess clinical efficacy or safety outcomes, limiting its human evidence value.

Ask the literature about ipamorelin
Abstract

The analysis of low-molecular-mass peptides in doping controls has become a mandatory aspect in sports drug testing and, thus, the number of samples that has to be tested for these analytes has been steadily increasing. Several peptides <2 kDa with performance-enhancing properties are covered by the list of prohibited substances of the World Anti-Doping Agency including Desmopressin, LH-RH, Buserelin, Triptorelin, Leuprolide, GHRP-1, GHRP-2, GHRP-3, GHRP-4, GHRP-5,GHRP-6, Alexamorelin, Ipamorelin, Hexarelin, ARA-290, AOD-9604, TB-500 and Anamorelin. With the presented method employing direct urine injection into a liquid chromatograph followed by ion-mobility time-of-flight mass spectrometry, a facile, specific and sensitive assay for the aforementioned peptidic compounds is provided. The accomplished sensitivity allows for limits of detection between 50 and 500 pg/mL and thus covers the minimum required performance level of 2 ng/mL accordingly. The method is precise (imprecision <20%) and linear in the estimated working range between 0 and 10 ng/mL. The stability of the peptides in urine was tested, and -20°C was found to be the appropriate storage temperature for sports drug testing. Finally, proof-of-concept was shown by analysing elimination study urine samples collected from individuals having administered GHRP-6, GHRP-2, or LHRH.

Educational summary of published research — not medical advice. Full text is shown only where licensing permits.