Rapid determination of sulfamethoxazole and trimethoprim illegally added to health products using excitation–emission matrix fluorescence coupled with the second-order calibration method†
Abstract
In this work, a simple and fast analytical method based on a self-weighted alternating trilinear decomposition (SWATLD) algorithm coupled with excitation–emission matrix (EEM) fluorescence was developed for the simultaneous determination of sulfamethoxazole (SMZ) and trimethoprim (TMP) illegally added to health products. With the second-order advantage, the proposed method obtained satisfactory results in the presence of peak overlap and unknown interferences. The analysis time for a single sample is only 0.8 minutes. The average spiked recoveries of SMZ and TMP in three health product spiked samples were in the range of 91.0–106.2% and 86.8–107.8%, respectively. The relative standard deviations (RSDs) were lower than 8.6%. In addition, verification parameters including sensitivity (SEN), selectivity (SEL), the limit of detection (LOD), the limit of quantification (LOQ), intra-day precision, and inter-day precision were calculated, and the results show that the proposed method is feasible. The quantitative results of the proposed method were further confirmed by the LC-MS/MS method, which proved that the proposed method was efficient and green for drug-abuse monitoring of SMZ and TMP in health products.