Acta Chimica Slovaca (ACS) publishes papers on fundamental and applied aspects of chemistry, biochemistry, chemical technology, chemical engineering and process control, biotechnology and food technology. Welcome are also topics which include chemical aspects of materials, physical chemistry and chemical physics, analytical chemistry, macromolecular chemistry and biomedical engineering.

A new method for macrolide antibiotics determination in wastewater from three different wastewater treatment plants

Pavlína Landová * a, Milada Vávrová b

Institute of Environmental Chemistry, Faculty of Chemistry, Brno University of Technology, Purkyňova 464/118, 612 00 Brno, Czech Republic
a AdMaS centre, Faculty of Civil Engineering, Brno University of Technology, Purkyňova 139, 612 00 Brno, Czech Republic
b AdMaS centre, Faculty of Civil Engineering, Brno University of Technology, Purkyňova 139, 612 00 Brno, Czech Republic

E-mail: * xclandova@fch.vutbr.cz

Abstract: An effective and practical method for the determination of macrolide antibiotics azithromycin, clarithromycin, erythromycin and roxithromycin in wastewater samples has been developed. The analytical method combines solid phase extraction followed by a chromatographic separation by hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography (HILIC) coupled with an ion trap mass spectrometer utilizing the electrospray ionization technique. Detection of positively charged ions was performed in full scan mode from 500 to 900 m/z. The method detection limits and method quantification limits obtained were in the range of 2.03—7.59 ng L–1 and 6.08—23.84 ng L–1, respectively. Recoveries of solid phase extraction were obtained using SupelTM-Select HLB cartridges ranging from 85.76 % to 92.54 %. All target antibiotics were detected in 100 % of the collected raw influent samples with concentrations varying from 15 ng L–1 to 1849 ng L–1. Azithromycin, clarithromycin and erythromycin were also detected in 100 % of the treated water samples and roxithromycin was present in 96 % of the samples. The highest determined concentration in the treated water samples was 1404 ng L–1 of azithromycin. Based on the determined macrolide concentrations, removal efficiencies of individual wastewater treatment plants were calculated to range from 13 % to 100 %.

Keywords: high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), macrolide antibiotics, mass spectrometry (MS), solid phase extraction (SPE), wastewater

Full paper in Portable Document Format: acs_0270.pdf

Acta Chimica Slovaca, Vol. 10, No. 1, 2017, pp. 47—53, DOI: 10.1515/acs-2017-0008