Therapeutic Drug Monitoring by Dried Blood Spot: Progress to Date and Future Directions

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Abstract

This article discusses dried blood spot (DBS) sampling in therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM). The most important advantages of DBS sampling in TDM are the minimally invasive procedure of a finger prick (home sampling), the small volume (children), and the stability of the analyte. Many assays in DBS have been reported in the literature over the previous 5 years. These assays and their analytical techniques are reviewed here. Factors that may influence the accuracy and reproducibility of DBS methods are also discussed. Important issues are the correlation with plasma/serum concentrations and the influence of hematocrit on spot size and recovery. The different substrate materials are considered. DBS sampling can be a valid alternative to conventional venous sampling. However, patient correlation studies are indispensable to prove this. Promising developments are dried plasma spots using membrane and hematocrit correction using the potassium concentration.

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Wilhelm, A. J., den Burger, J. C. G., & Swart, E. L. (2014, November 1). Therapeutic Drug Monitoring by Dried Blood Spot: Progress to Date and Future Directions. Clinical Pharmacokinetics. Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40262-014-0177-7

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