Literature DB >> 33626820

Long-Term Stability of 18 Nutritional Biomarkers Stored at -20 °C and 5 °C for up to 12 Months.

Huiping Chen1, Maya R Sternberg1, Rosemary L Schleicher1, Christine M Pfeiffer1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Consistent information on long-term storage stability for a broad range of nutritional biomarkers is lacking. We investigated the stability of 18 biomarkers stored at suboptimal temperatures (-20 °C and 5 °C) for up to 12 months.
METHODS: Multiple vials of serum or whole blood pools (3 concentrations) were stored at -20 °C or 5 °C, removed from the -20 °C freezer after 3, 6, 9, and 12 months and from the 5 °C refrigerator after 6 and 12 months, and placed into a -70 °C freezer until analysis at study completion. Vials stored continuously at -70 °C were used as the reference condition for optimal storage. We measured 18 biomarkers: 4 iron status, 1 inflammation, 8 water-soluble vitamin, and 5 fat-soluble vitamin. For each temperature, we calculated geometric mean concentrations and average percent changes of geometric means across pools relative to the reference condition estimated from a linear mixed model.
RESULTS: Most biomarkers (13 of 18) showed no difference in concentration after 12 months of storage at -20 °C. Serum ferritin (1.5%), soluble transferrin receptor (-1.7%), and folate (-10.5%) showed small to moderate significant changes at 6 months, but changes were acceptable based on biologic variability. Serum pyridoxal-5'-phosphate (-18.6% at 9 months) and vitamin C (-23% at 6 months) showed large and unacceptable changes at -20 °C. All serum fat-soluble vitamins and iron status indicators, vitamin B12, total homocysteine, and methylmalonic acid showed acceptable changes when stored at 5 °C for up to 12 months.
CONCLUSIONS: Overall, we found good long-term stability for multiple nutritional biomarkers stored at suboptimal temperatures.
© 2018 American Association for Clinical Chemistry.

Entities:  

Year:  2018        PMID: 33626820     DOI: 10.1373/jalm.2017.025478

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Appl Lab Med        ISSN: 2475-7241


  2 in total

1.  Folate Forms in RBC and Whole-Blood Lysates Appear Stable When Stored Frozen for 2 Years.

Authors:  Zia Fazili; Neelima Paladugula; Ming Zhang; Christine M Pfeiffer
Journal:  J Nutr       Date:  2021-09-04       Impact factor: 4.687

2.  Delayed Processing of Chilled Whole Blood for 24 Hours Does Not Affect the Concentration of the Majority of Micronutrient Status Biomarkers.

Authors:  Kerry S Jones; Sarah R Meadows; Karen Chamberlain; Damon A Parkington; Dave Collins; Polly Page; Albert Koulman
Journal:  J Nutr       Date:  2021-11-02       Impact factor: 4.798

  2 in total

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