4.7 Article

Variation of lead bioaccessibility in soil reference materials: Intra- and inter-laboratory assessments

Journal

CHEMOSPHERE
Volume 312, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2022.137293

Keywords

Heavy metal; Bioaccessibility; Standard reference materials; In vitro assay

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This study assessed the bioaccessibility of lead (Pb) in 4 commonly used standard reference materials (SRMs). The results showed that the measurements of Pb bioaccessibility were repeatable and reproducible within and between laboratories. The use of these SRMs as quality control samples is reliable for Pb bioaccessibility analysis.
Standard reference materials (SRMs) have been commonly used to perform quality assurance and quality control (QA/QC) in soil total metal concentration analyses or bioaccessibility assessment. In this study, 10 experimenters from 4 laboratories determined bioaccessibility of lead (Pb) in 4 widely-used SRMs (NIST 2710a, NIST 2587, BGS 102, and GBW 07405). Based on the gastric phase (GP) of the unified BARGE bioaccessibility method (UBM) and the Solubility Bioavailability Research Consortium procedure (SBRC), Pb bioaccessibility in SRMs was compared within and between laboratories to assess their intra-laboratory repeatability and inter-laboratory reproducibility. Lead bioaccessibility was 14.1 ?? 2.44%-101 ?? 2.48% in the 4 SRMs. The values were in vivo validated based on a mouse model in previous studies (R2 = 0.97???0.98), suggesting the reliability of Pb bioaccessibility data. Strong correlations were observed for Pb bioaccessibility among 7 experimenters (R2 = 0.94???0.99) at the Nanjing University (NJU) laboratory and similar strong correlations were also found between each two of the 4 laboratories (R2 = 0.94???0.98), illustrating consistency in intra??? and inter???laboratory performance. The intralaboratory repeatability and inter-laboratory reproducibility were generally acceptable with relative standard deviations (RSDs) of Pb bioaccessibility being ???10% within laboratory and ???20% between laboratories, except in a soil with low bioaccessible Pb (BSG 102). Our study suggested that measurements of Pb bioaccessibility in SRMs based on the two in vivo validated methods were repeatable and reproducible within and between laboratories, further verified their reliability being used as QA/QC samples during Pb bioaccessibility assessment.

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