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Dive into the research topics where Donald R. A. Uges is active.

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Featured researches published by Donald R. A. Uges.


The Lancet | 2000

Circulating plasma platinum more than 10 years after cisplatin treatment for testicular cancer

Jourik A. Gietema; M.T. Meinardi; Jürgen Messerschmidt; T Gelevert; Friedrich Alt; Donald R. A. Uges; Dirk Sleijfer

We have shown in patients cured from metastatic testicular cancer that up to 20 years after administration of cisplatin-containing chemotherapy, circulating platinum is still detectable in plasma. This finding may influence the development of long-term, treatment-related side-effects.


British Journal of Cancer | 1990

The role of glutathione in resistance to cisplatin in a human small cell lung cancer cell line

C. J. L. M. Meijer; Nanno Mulder; Geesiena Hospers; Donald R. A. Uges; de Elisabeth G. E. Vries

The role of glutathione (GSH) in resistance to cisplatin (CDDP) was studied in a human small cell lung carcinoma cell line (GLC4) and a CDDP-resistant subline (GLC4-CDDP). In addition to studying the steady state of GSH, the kinetics of this defence system were also studied via the monitoring of the GSH status of the cells under continuous pressure of CDDP. GLC4-CDDP maintained its elevated GSH level whereas GLC4 (under pressure of CDDP) quickly synthesised GSH to about twice its initial level, corresponding with 80% of the GSH level of GLC4-CDDP. D,L-buthionine-S,R-sulphoximine (BSO) was used to analyse the role of GSH in resistance to CDDP. Pretreatment with BSO (48 h, 50 microM, GSH not detectable) increased the CDDP-induced cytotoxicity 2.8-fold in GLC4-CDDP and 1.7-fold in GLC4. In GLC4 no changes in the amount of platinum (Pt) bound to DNA could be observed after GSH depletion. Changes in formation of interstrand cross-links or the main Pt-containing intrastrand cross-link in digested DNA, the Pt-GG adduct, were also not observed. In GSH depleted GLC4-CDDP cells, an increase in the amount of Pt bound to DNA and in the Pt-GG adduct was observed. Pretreatment with BSO substantially reduced the repair of Pt bound to DNA in both cell lines. We conclude that an increased GSH level and GSH synthesis capacity were demonstrated in CDDP resistant cells. The observations after BSO treatment suggest two roles for GSH in CDDP resistance, namely that of a cytosolic elimination resulting in less DNA platination and a nuclear effect on the formation and repair of DNA platinum adducts.


Therapeutic Drug Monitoring | 2009

Robust, high-throughput LC-MS/MS method for therapeutic drug monitoring of cyclosporine, tacrolimus, everolimus, and sirolimus in whole blood.

Remco A. Koster; Eli C. F. Dijkers; Donald R. A. Uges

The authors describe a fast, robust, and straightforward liquid chromatography and tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) method with the use of a single LC-MS/MS system for cyclosporine A, tacrolimus, sirolimus, and everolimus in whole blood. The purpose of this method was to replace the immunoassay (IA) methods used in the laboratory of a hospital performing most organ transplantations (including heart, lung, liver, kidneys, bone marrow, and intestinal tract). Several LC-MS/MS methods have been described so far; however, most of them require complicated online extraction procedures. The described LC-MS/MS method uses a chromatographic gradient in combination with protein precipitation as sample preparation. The chromatographic method is capable of separating otherwise interfering peaks, with an analysis time of 2.6 minutes. Analyses were performed on a triple quadrupole LC-MS/MS system, with a C18 column held at 60°C. Sample preparation required only 1 precipitation/dilution step. Sirolimus and everolimus are prepared and measured separately from tacrolimus and cyclosporine. During method development, it was found that the use of zinc sulfate provides process efficiency results of about 100% for tacrolimus and cyclosporine A, but only 81% and 87% for sirolimus and everolimus, respectively. With the developed sample preparation without zinc sulfate for sirolimus and everolimus, process efficiencies were 99% and 108%, respectively. The methods have been fully validated, and in a comparative study, patient samples were analyzed with IA and our developed LC-MS/MS methods. In the comparative studies, correlations (R2 values) of more than 0.85 were found between the IA and the new LC-MS/MS patient blood levels. There was a systematic deviation in blood levels measured by LC-MS/MS compared with IAs for cyclosporine A (17% lower than with immunoassay) and everolimus (30% lower than with IA). There seemed to be little or no systematic deviation for sirolimus and tacrolimus. The controls determined by the LC-MS/MS method over the past 10 months showed coefficient of variations of no more than 8.0% for each of the 4 immunosuppressants. In conclusion, the authors found the developed methods to be cost saving, more flexible, and more sensitive and that these methods have larger linear ranges than the previously used IA methods. The methods are already used for more than 20,000 patient samples in the daily routine, analyzing approximately 70 patient samples per day.


Journal of Chromatography B | 2011

Determination of moxifloxacin in dried blood spots using LC-MS/MS and the impact of the hematocrit and blood volume.

D.H. Vu; Remco A. Koster; Jan-Willem C. Alffenaar; Jacobus Brouwers; Donald R. A. Uges

Moxifloxacin (MFX) is a potential oral agent use in the treatment of multidrug-resistance tuberculosis (MDR-TB). Due to variability in pharmacokinetics and in vitro susceptibility of causative bacteria, therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) of MFX is recommended. Conventional plasma sampling for TDM is facing logistical challenges, especially in limited resource areas, and dried blood spots (DBS) sampling may offer a chance to overcome this problem. The objective of this study was to develop a LC-MS/MS method for determination of MFX in dried blood spots (DBS) that is applicable for TDM. The influence of paper type, the hematocrit (Hct) and the blood volume per spot (V(b)) on the estimated blood volume in a disc (V(est)) was investigated. The extracts of 8mm diameter discs punched out from DBS were analyzed using liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) with cyanoimipramin as internal standard. The method was validated with respect to selectivity, linearity, accuracy, precision, sensitivity, recovery and stability. The effect of Hct and V(b) on LC-MS/MS analytical result was also investigated. The relationship between MFX concentrations in venous and finger prick DBS and those in plasma was clinically explored. V(est) was highly influenced by Hct while the effect of V(b) appeared to be different among paper types. Calibration curves were linear in the range of 0.05-6.00 mg/L with inter-day and intra-day precisions and biases of less than 11.1%. The recovery was 84.5, 85.1 and 92.6% in response to blood concentration of 0.15, 2.50 and 5.00 mg/L, respectively. A matrix effect of less than 11.9% was observed. MFX in DBS was stable for at least 4 weeks at room condition (temperature of 25°C and humidity of 50%). A large range of Hct value produced a significant analytical bias and it can be corrected with resulting DBS size. A good correlation between DBS and plasma concentrations was observed and comparable results between venous DBS and finger prick DBS was attained. This fully validated method is suitable for determination of MFX in dried blood spot and applicable for TDM.


CNS Drugs | 2010

The Relationship between Benzodiazepine Use and Traffic Accidents: A Systematic Literature Review

Beitske E. Smink; A.C.G. Egberts; Klaas J. Lusthof; Donald R. A. Uges; Johan J. de Gier

In many countries, benzodiazepines are the most commonly used and misused psychoactive medicinal drugs. Results of epidemiological studies investigating the association between benzodiazepine use and traffic accidents seem to be inconclusive or inconsistent at first sight. However, the outcome of epidemiological studies may be influenced by several methodological factors like study design, study population, exposure measurement, outcome definitions and possible confounders.Our objective was to conduct a systematic literature review of epidemiological studies that investigated the association between benzodiazepine use and traffic accidents, including related outcomes like culpability and injury or accident severity. We searched EMBASE, PubMed and Forensic Science Abstracts 3/0 (FORS®) for references included in these databases at 1 June 2009 using the term ‘benzodiazepines’ in combination with ‘driving performance’ or ‘accident risk’ or ‘traffic accident’. For inclusion in this review, the study design had to be comparative, include road users involved in accidents and provide specific data about benzodiazepines. Sixty-six studies were included in the review. The study populations varied from the general (driving) population, accident-involved road users with or without injury and persons admitted to a hospital to fatally injured accident-involved drivers. Exposure assessment was performed by using toxicological results, prescription data or questionnaires.The divergent study populations and comparison groups and the variety of methods used to express the outcome of interest hampered comparison between results.Evidence is growing that exposure to benzodiazepines is related to increased accident risk. The literature indicates that the greatest accident risk is associated with the use of long half-life benzodiazepines, increasing dosage and the first few weeks of use of benzodiazepines. Clear evidence of increased culpability associated with benzodiazepine use is scarce. More research has to be done to elucidate the relationship between benzodiazepine use and injury severity.


Pharmacogenomics Journal | 2005

Genetic factors influencing pyrimidine-antagonist chemotherapy

Jan Gerard Maring; Hendricus Groen; Floris M. Wachters; Donald R. A. Uges; de Elisabeth G. E. Vries

Pyrimidine antagonists, for example, 5-fluorouracil (5-FU), cytarabine (ara-C) and gemcitabine (dFdC), are widely used in chemotherapy regimes for colorectal, breast, head and neck, non-small-cell lung cancer, pancreatic cancer and leukaemias. Extensive metabolism is a prerequisite for conversion of these pyrimidine prodrugs into active compounds. Interindividual variation in the activity of metabolising enzymes can affect the extent of prodrug activation and, as a result, act on the efficacy of chemotherapy treatment. Genetic factors at least partly explain interindividual variation in antitumour efficacy and toxicity of pyrimidine antagonists. In this review, proteins relevant for the efficacy and toxicity of pyrimidine antagonists will be summarised. In addition, the role of germline polymorphisms, tumour-specific somatic mutations and protein expression levels in the metabolic pathways and clinical pharmacology of these drugs are described. Germline polymorphisms of uridine monophosphate kinase (UMPK), orotate phosphoribosyl transferase (OPRT), thymidylate synthase (TS), dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase (DPD) and methylene tetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) and gene expression levels of OPRT, UMPK, TS, DPD, uridine phosphorylase, uridine kinase, thymidine phosphorylase, thymidine kinase, deoxyuridine triphosphate nucleotide hydrolase are discussed in relation to 5-FU efficacy. Cytidine deaminase (CDD) and 5′-nucleotidase (5NT) gene polymorphisms and CDD, 5NT, deoxycytidine kinase and MRP5 gene expression levels and their potential relation to dFdC and ara-C cytotoxicity are reviewed.


PLOS Medicine | 2011

Effect of supplementation with zinc and other micronutrients on malaria in Tanzanian children: a randomised trial

Jacobien Veenemans; Paul Milligan; Andrew M. Prentice; Laura R. A. Schouten; Nienke Inja; Aafke C. van der Heijden; Linsey C. C. de Boer; Esther Js Jansen; Anna E. Koopmans; Wendy T. M. Enthoven; Rob J. Kraaijenhagen; Ayşe Y. Demir; Donald R. A. Uges; Erasto V. Mbugi; H.F.J. Savelkoul; Hans Verhoef

Hans Verhoef and colleagues report findings from a randomized trial conducted among Tanzanian children at high risk for malaria. Children in the trial received either daily oral supplementation with either zinc alone, multi-nutrients without zinc, multi-nutrients with zinc, or placebo. The investigators did not find evidence from this study that zinc or multi-nutrients protected against malaria episodes.


Journal of Chromatography B | 2010

Method for therapeutic drug monitoring of azole antifungal drugs in human serum using LC/MS/MS

Jan-Willem C. Alffenaar; A. M. A. Wessels; K. van Hateren; Ben Greijdanus; Jos G. W. Kosterink; Donald R. A. Uges

Fungal infections occur in immunocompromised patients. Azole antifungal agents are used for the prophylaxis and treatment of these infections. The interest in therapeutic drug monitoring azole agents has increased over the last few years. Inter- and intra-patient variability of pharmacokinetics, drug-drug interactions, serum concentration related toxicity and success of therapy has stressed the need of frequently therapeutic drug monitoring of the drugs, belonging to the group of azoles. Therefore a simple, rapid and flexible method of analysis is required. This method is based on the precipitation of proteins in human serum with LC/MS/MS detection. Validation was performed according to the guidelines for bioanalytical method validation of the food and drug administration agency. The four most used azole drugs can be detected in human serum within the clinical relevant serum levels with good accuracy and reproducibility at the limit of quantification. Intra- and inter-day validation demonstrated good accuracy and reproducibility. A rapid, sensitive and flexible LC/MS/MS method has been developed and validated to measure voriconazole (VRZ), fluconazole (FLZ), itraconazole (ITZ) and posaconazole (PSZ) in human serum. This new method is suitable for clinical pharmacokinetic studies and routine monitoring in daily practice.


Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2004

Influence of functional polymorphisms of the MDR1 gene on vincristine pharmacokinetics in childhood acute lymphoblastic Leukemia

Sabine L. A. Plasschaert; Ellis Groninger; Marike Boezen; Ido P. Kema; Elisabeth G.E. de Vries; Donald R. A. Uges; Anjo J. P. Veerman; Willem A. Kamps; Edo Vellenga; Siebold S.N. de Graaf; Eveline S. J. M. de Bont

Our objective was to investigate the effect of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the P‐glycoprotein MDR1 gene on vincristine pharmacokinetics and side effects in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia.


Talanta | 2013

Fast LC-MS/MS analysis of tacrolimus, sirolimus, everolimus and cyclosporin A in dried blood spots and the influence of the hematocrit and immunosuppressant concentration on recovery

Remco A. Koster; Jan-Willem C. Alffenaar; Ben Greijdanus; Donald R. A. Uges

We developed a method for the analysis of four immunosuppressants in dried blood spot (DBS) samples to facilitate therapeutic drug monitoring for transplant patients outside the hospital. An 8mm disc from the central part of the DBS was punched, extracted and followed by LC-MS/MS analysis. The method was validated with ranges from 1.00-50.0 µg/L for tacrolimus, sirolimus and everolimus, and from 20.0-2000 µg/L for cyclosporin A. The validation showed a maximum overall bias of 13.0% for the sirolimus LLOQ, while the maximum overall CV was 15.7% for the everolimus LLOQ. All four immunosuppressants showed to be stable in DBS for at least 7 days at 22°C. The volume of the blood spot showed to have minor effect on measured concentrations. A cross-validation test between the 31 ET CHR paper and the Whatman FTA DMPK-C cards showed no significant difference between the two types of paper. During validation the hematocrit (HT) showed to have significant influence on the analytical results. When the measured concentrations were corrected for the effect of the HT, biases improved significantly. Additional recovery tests proved that the combination of especially low HT and high concentration does not only affect the spot size but can also affect the extraction recoveries of sirolimus and especially everolimus. Although the tested parameters like HT and concentrations are extreme and unlikely for routine analysis of outpatients, the fundamental effect of the combination of these parameters on extraction recoveries are proven with this research. The protein binding in the blood and hydrogen binding to the cellulose of the paper is suggested to influence extractions and gives new insights in the extraction methodology of DBS samples. The observed HT effect during the validation appeared to be negligible during the correlation study as no concentration corrections for the HT values were needed. Nevertheless, results from DBS samples with extremely high concentrations combined with extremely low HT values should be interpreted with caution. The patient correlation study showed good correlations with R(2) values higher than 0.87 between venous whole blood and venous DBS samples were observed for all four immunosuppressants. The Passing & Bablok plots showed positive biases of the slopes of 18% for tacrolimus and less than 12% for sirolimus, everolimus and cyclosporin A. The validated method, proved stability of the immunosuppressants in DBS, and the correlation study showed the capability of the DBS method to be used as an alternative for whole blood analysis in therapeutic drug monitoring.

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Jan-Willem C. Alffenaar

University Medical Center Groningen

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Jos G. W. Kosterink

University Medical Center Groningen

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Ben Greijdanus

University Medical Center Groningen

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Tjip S. van der Werf

University Medical Center Groningen

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Daan Touw

University Medical Center Groningen

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Remco A. Koster

University Medical Center Groningen

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Dirk Sleijfer

University Medical Center Groningen

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Elisabeth G.E. de Vries

University Medical Center Groningen

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