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High-resolution mass spectrometry identifies delayed biomarkers for improved precision in acetaminophen/paracetamol human biomonitoring

Eva Gorrochategui, Marc Le Vee, Habiba Selmi, Anne Gérard, Jade Chaker, Annette M Krais, Christian Lindh, Olivier Fardel, Cécile Chevrier, Pierre Le Cann, Gary W Miller, Robert Barouki, Bernard Jégou, Thomas Gicquel, David M Kristensen, Arthur David*

*Corresponding author for this work
7 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Paracetamol/acetaminophen (N-acetyl-p-aminophenol, APAP) is a top selling analgesic used in more than 600 prescription and non-prescription pharmaceuticals. To study efficiently some of the potential undesirable effects associated with increasing APAP consumption (e.g., developmental disorders, drug-induced liver injury), there is a need to improve current APAP biomonitoring methods that are limited by APAP short half-life. Here, we demonstrate using high-resolution mass spectrometry (HRMS) in several human studies that APAP thiomethyl metabolite conjugates (S-methyl-3-thioacetaminophen sulfate and S-methyl-3-thioacetaminophen sulphoxide sulfate) are stable biomarkers with delayed excretion rates compared to conventional APAP metabolites, that could provide a more reliable history of APAP ingestion in epidemiological studies. We also show that these biomarkers could serve as relevant clinical markers to diagnose APAP acute intoxication in overdosed patients, when free APAP have nearly disappeared from blood. Using in vitro liver models (HepaRG cells and primary human hepatocytes), we then confirm that these thiomethyl metabolites are directly linked to the toxic N-acetyl-p-benzoquinone imine (NAPQI) elimination, and produced via an overlooked pathway called the thiomethyl shunt pathway. Further studies will be needed to determine whether the production of the reactive hepatotoxic NAPQI metabolites is currently underestimated in human. Nevertheless, these biomarkers could already serve to improve APAP human biomonitoring, and investigate, for instance, inter-individual variability in NAPQI production to study underlying causes involved in APAP-induced hepatotoxicity. Overall, our findings demonstrate the potential of exposomics-based HRMS approach to advance towards a better precision for human biomonitoring.

Original languageEnglish
Article number108299
JournalEnvironment International
Volume181
Number of pages14
ISSN0160-4120
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2023

Keywords

  • Acetaminophen/paracetamol
  • Chemical exposome
  • Exposomics
  • High-resolution mass spectrometry
  • Human biomonitoring
  • Thiomethyl metabolites

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