Abstract

Oral fluid testing is steadily building its position as a valuable complement or alternative to plasma and urine analyses in everyday laboratory practice. However, the great significance of the sample collection process in the attainment of representative results is not always paralleled by the attention given to its informed selection. Few evaluations of commercially available sample collection devices have been published until now, and the current work intends to fill this gap by presenting an evaluation of swabs from 15 different devices for the analysis of 49 popular drugs. Swabs, derived from sample collection devices, were used to collect a drug-fortified mixture. Then, swab-retrieved samples were subjected to instrumental analysis with the high-performance liquid chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry method. Results within the 80-120% range were considered to have no significant impact on analyte concentration (thus satisfactory) and were observed in 44.1% of all results. Out of the 15 evaluated swabs, 7 provided results in the aforementioned range for more than half of the substances under study. The possibility of matrix effects originating from swab materials was also investigated. The selection of an appropriate oral fluid sample collection method plays a critical role in the success of the analytical procedure, a fact that is well-illustrated by the tremendous differences between analyte concentrations observed in this research. Perhaps, the tedious labour of improving sample preparation and analysis methods already in-use could be spared if only greater emphasis were to be put on the improvement and better selection of suitable solutions for oral fluid collection.

Highlights

  • Oral fluid is a direct filtrate of blood, well resembling the small molecule content of its native plasma

  • The stability of the tested drugs during the 60 min sampling period at room temperature and during the period of time in which samples were placed in a refrigerated autosampler until LC-MS/MS analysis should not influence the results, as all reference samples were stored under exactly the same conditions throughout the entire process

  • The choice of an adequate oral fluid sample collection method is critical to the attainment of representative results, as certain methods can enormously influence analyte concentrations

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Summary

Introduction

Oral fluid is a direct filtrate of blood, well resembling the small molecule content of its native plasma. Small (

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