4.7 Article

Identification and confirmation of chemical residues in food by chromatography-mass spectrometry and other techniques

Journal

TRAC-TRENDS IN ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 27, Issue 11, Pages 1070-1090

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.trac.2008.10.004

Keywords

Confirmation; Food; Gas chromatography; Identification; Liquid chromatography; Mass spectrometry; Method validation; Pesticide residue; Qualitative analysis; Tandem mass spectrometry

Funding

  1. Israel Science Foundation [1172/07]
  2. James Franck Center for Laser Matter Interaction Research, Chicago, Illinois, USA
  3. Ministry of Science, Culture, Sport of the State of Israel
  4. Karlsruhe Research Center (FZK), Germany

Ask authors/readers for more resources

A quantitative answer cannot exist in analysis without a qualitative component to give enough confidence that the result meets the analytical needs (i.e. the result relates to the analyte and not something else). just as a quantitative method must typically undergo an empirical validation process to demonstrate that it is fit for purpose, qualitative methods should also empirically demonstrate that they are suitable to meet the analytical needs. However, thorough qualitative method validation requires analysis of a great number of samples (possibly more than can be reasonably done), which is generally avoided due to the time and the effort involved. Instead, mass spectrometry (MS) is generally assumed to be the gold standard for qualitative methods, and its results are typically unquestioned. For example, a system was developed by European regulators of veterinary drug residues in food animals (2002/657/EC), in which the number of identification points given in MS analyses depends on the general degree of selectivity of the MS technique used. This well-defined approach gives a definite answer for decision-makers, so it has grown in popularity. However, the identification-points system is not scientific. The reality is that each situation requires information gathering and careful deductive thinking on the part of the analyst to make MS identifications. Rather than devise arbitrary requirements that need to be met by an unthinking analyst, we remind the analytical community that confirmation can be given only if two or more independent analyses are in agreement, preferably using orthogonally selective (independent) chemical mechanisms. In this article, we discuss the proper use of terminology, highlight the identification power of various MS techniques, demonstrate how MS identifications can fail if precautions are not taken, and re-assert the value of basic confirmation practices, qualitative method validation, information checklists, routine quality-control procedures, and blind proficiency-test analyses. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available