4.7 Article

Factors influencing the extraction of pharmaceuticals from sewage sludge and soil: an experimental design approach

Journal

ANALYTICAL AND BIOANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 408, Issue 22, Pages 6153-6168

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00216-016-9725-3

Keywords

Emerging pollutants; Antibiotics; Influencing factors; Extraction; Physical-chemical properties; Accuracy profile

Funding

  1. Environment and Agronomy Division of INRA (Pari Scientifique Pharma-PRO)
  2. ONEMA-Office National de l'Eau et des Milieux Aquatiques (RisqPRO project)
  3. ANR-French National Research Agency (CEMABS) [ANR-13-CESA-0016-01]
  4. Region Ile-de-France
  5. French National Research Agency [ANR-11-INBS-0001]
  6. Veolia Research and Innovation

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Pharmaceuticals can enter the environment when organic waste products are recycled on agricultural soils. The extraction of pharmaceuticals is a challenging step in their analysis. The very different extraction conditions proposed in the literature make the choice of the right method for multi-residue analysis difficult. This study aimed at evaluating, with experimental design methodology, the influence of the nature, pH and composition of the extraction medium on the extraction recovery of 14 pharmaceuticals, including 8 antibiotics, from soil and sewage sludge. Preliminary experimental designs showed that acetonitrile and citrate-phosphate buffer were the best extractants. Then, a response surface design demonstrated that many cross-product and squared terms had significant effects, explaining the shapes of the response surfaces. It also allowed optimising the pharmaceutical recoveries in soil and sludge. The optimal conditions were interpreted considering the ionisation states of the compounds, their solubility in the extraction medium and their interactions with the solid matrix. To perform the analysis, a compromise was made for each matrix. After a QuEChERS purification, the samples were analysed by online SPE-UHPLC-MS-MS. Both methods were simple and economical. They were validated with the accuracy profile methodology for soil and sludge and characterised for another type of soil, digested sludge and composted sludge. Trueness globally ranged between 80 and 120 % recovery, and inter-and intra-day precisions were globally below 20 % relative standard deviation. Various pharmaceuticals were present in environmental samples, with concentration levels ranging from a few micrograms per kilogramme up to thousands of micrograms per kilogramme.

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