4.7 Article

Citrinin Determination in Food and Food Supplements by LC-MS/MS: Development and Use of Reference Materials in an International Collaborative Study

Journal

TOXINS
Volume 13, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/toxins13040245

Keywords

citrinin; reference materials; food; food supplements; red yeast rice; Ginkgo biloba; LC-MS; MS; method validation study

Funding

  1. European Commission [SA/CEN/ENTR/520/2013-17.11]

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The study demonstrates the development of incurred reference materials containing citrinin and their successful application in a method validation study to harmonize citrinin determination in food and supplements. The results of an international collaborative trial showed that the analytical method could be standardized, with acceptable within-laboratory and between-laboratory precision. The production of citrinin reference materials is an important step towards quality control systems and proficiency tests in food and feed industries.
The development of incurred reference materials containing citrinin (CIT) and their successful application in a method validation study (MVS) in order to harmonize CIT determination in food and food supplements are demonstrated. CIT-contaminated materials made of red yeast rice (RYR), wheat flour, and Ginkgo biloba leaves (GBL), as well as food supplements made of red yeast rice (FS-RYR) and Ginkgo biloba leaves (FS-GBL), were manufactured in-house via fungal cultivation on collected raw materials. The homogeneity and stability from randomly selected containers were verified according to the ISO 13528. CIT was found to be homogenously distributed and stable in all contaminated materials, with no significant degradation during the timescale of the MVS when storage was performed up to +4 degrees C. Next, an MVS was organized with eighteen international laboratories using the provided standard operating procedure and 12 test materials, including three RYRs (blank, <50 mu g/kg, <2000 mu g/kg), two wheat flours (blank, <50 mu g/kg), two GBL powders (blank, <50 mu g/kg), three FS-RYRs (blank, <50 mu g/kg, <2000 mu g/kg), and two FS-GBLs (blank, <50 mu g/kg). The results of seven CIT-incurred materials showed acceptable within-laboratory precision (RSDr) varying from 6.4% to 14.6% and between-laboratory precision (RSDR) varying from 10.2% to 37.3%. Evidenced by HorRat values < 2.0, the results of the collaborative trial demonstrated that the applied analytical method could be standardized. Furthermore, the appropriateness of producing CIT reference materials is an important step towards food and feed quality control systems and the organization of proficiency tests.

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