Separations Forensics Portfolio 1 | Page 6

AB SCIEX is a global leader in mass spectrometry products. The company's global leadership and world-class service & support in the mass spectrometry industry have made it a trusted partner to thousands of the scientists and lab analysts worldwide who are focused on basic research, drug discovery & development, food & environmental testing, forensics and clinical research. Their broad portfolio of scientific analytical tools include innovative instrument systems, intuitive software and pre-packaged methods -- all of which are part of workflows that reduce complexity and accelerate results. These tools apply mass spectrometry technologies to enable scientists to conduct quantitative and qualitative analysis across a wide range of applications. LC/MS/MS quantitative methods for drugs of abuse screening Conventional methods for drugs of abuse analysis for forensic technology require multiple assays and repeated analysis on individual samples, which can be both expensive and timeconsuming. By comparison, LC tandem mass spectrometric analysis (LC/MS/MS) for forensic toxicology provides an easy and rapid technique that enables simultaneous multi-drug quantitation and identification from various sample matrices such as saliva, urine, or serum samples. In addition, the sensitivity of LC/MS/MS quantitative methods is capable of detecting and quantifying drugs of abuse for forensic toxicology at levels significantly lower than the current cut-off levels. The AB SCIEX 3200 QTRAP LC/MS/MS System, for analysing hundreds of drugs in a single analysis For more information on FluidX products, contact [email protected] Analysis across drug classes LC/MS/MS is a very valuable tool in forensic toxicology screening. By using LC/MS/MS analysis, sample preparation can be simplified, and run times can be reduced, resulting in increased throughput and faster turnaround. Sample preparation is generic, allowing for a wide variety of compound classes to be screened using a single procedure for sample preparation and chromatographic analysis. The most significant advantage of using simple, relatively-generic sample preparation for forensic toxicology is that it allows for drug analysis across multiple compound classes in a single method. Multi-target screening (MTS) and general unknown screening (GUS) are both useful workflows in forensic toxicology. Typically, there is a relatively small subset of substances that are heavily-used and abused, making a targeted approach the most useful because the high proficiency in detecting drugs at low concentrations and the ease of data processing and interpretation. If a drug has not been characterized as a frequently-used or abused substance, it will be omitted from the target compound list and not detected. General unknown screening is, therefore, a complementary screening technique for detecting and identifying unexpected drugs, drug analogs, and drug metabolites during forensic toxicology testing.