A Semi-Automated Extraction of PFAS from Human Serum and Plasma Using Otto SPEcialist
This is an Application Brief and does not contain a detailed Experimental section.
Abstract
Human biomonitoring projects have identified per- and polyfluorinated alkyl substances (PFAS) as a group of persistent environmental compounds commonly found in humans. Sample preparation for these compounds requires solid phase extraction (SPE) and can be performed in a 96 well plate. A previous method optimized the extraction and SPE clean up protocol for human serum using a negative pressure SPE manifold. With the introduction of the Otto™ SPEcialist positive pressure manifold, the PFAS method was transferred to this device and evaluated for accuracy and repeatability in both human serum and plasma. The Otto SPEcialist performed similar to, and in some cases better than, the negative pressure manifold in terms of accuracy. Otto SPEcialist also was shown to have high precision with low %RSD values for replicate extractions of both human serum and plasma.
Benefits
- Otto SPEcialist provides a semi-automated positive pressure extraction method increasing efficiency, reproducibility, and accuracy of results
- Addition of the Otto SPEcialist, enhances and improves the total PFAS analysis workflow for human biomonitoring and exposure studies
Introduction
Large scale biomonitoring studies, such as the CDC’s National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES)1 and European Human Biomonitoring Initiative (HBM4EU)2 have identified numerous PFAS compounds in human biofluids. The best representative matrices of human exposure to PFAS have been either serum or plasma since blood derived matrices contain the highest concentrations of PFAS, thus requiring only a small sample size for sensitive analysis.3
Previously, a 96 well plate-based extraction method using weak anion exchange (WAX) was optimized for extraction of PFAS from human serum.4 The method was optimized and run using a negative pressure SPE manifold. As an alternative to using a negative pressure manifold, positive pressure SPE provides a more efficient and reliable solution.
The Otto SPEcialist is a semi-automated software driven positive pressure sample preparation device. Positive pressure SPE is advantageous over a negative pressure approach due to the equal application of pressure across all wells/cartridges making sample loading and elution more uniform. Additionally, positive pressure does not suffer from the maximum pressure limits of negative pressure utilizing a vacuum that can severely affect flow rates when cartridges become clogged. Finally, the Otto SPEcialist is programmable to automatically adjust pressure settings during the extraction process, which improves not only efficiency, but reproducibility as well. The goal of the following work was to transfer the previous extraction method onto the Otto SPEcialist, as well as to evaluate the method for human plasma.
Results and Discussion
The same SPE protocol and instrument methods described in Waters Application Note 720007114 were used for the evaluation of the Otto SPEcialist.4 In addition to human serum, the Otto SPEcialist was also used to extract human plasma to determine if the serum method was applicable to plasma as well.
NIST standard reference materials (SRMs) for human serum (NIST 1957) and human plasma (NIST 1950) were used to initially measure the method performance. NIST 1957 contains certified levels of seven non-fortified PFAS compounds ranging from 0.172–21.1 µg/kg, whereas NIST 1950 contains certified levels of six non-fortified PFAS compounds ranging from 0.182–10.43 µg/kg. Calculated concentrations and the % bias compared to the NIST certified value can be seen in Figure 1. The experimental values in both SRMs using the Otto extraction provided accurate calculated concentrations within 12% in serum and within 10% in plasma, with the exception of PFDA which had a 30% bias. The high bias in serum for PFDA could be due to the low tolerance on uncertainty for this certified value. The serum SRM was also compared to previous results using a manual negative pressure manifold with the results being very comparable or even slightly lower in bias for the Otto SPEcialist.
Additional experiments were run to evaluate a broader range of PFAS by spiking pooled lots of human serum and plasma with 27 PFAS. Accuracy and precision are detailed in Table 1 for three replicates of each matrix spiked at a concentration of 4 µg/kg (equivalent to 1 ng/mL injected concentration after SPE). The spiking experiment in serum was extracted using both the manual negative pressure manifold and OttoSPEcialist. Overall, the precision was better using the Otto SPEcialist, demonstrated by %RSD values below 10%, except for a few outlying compounds that were below 16% RSD. Accuracy of calculated concentration was also high for the Otto SPEcialist with all but two compounds having an accuracy greater than 80% in both matrices.
Conclusion
A previously established method for PFAS extraction from human serum evaluated using a negative pressure SPE manifold was successfully transferred onto the semi-automated Otto SPEcialist positive pressure extraction system. In addition, the method was shown to be suitable for the extraction of PFAS from human plasma as well. The system was evaluated using two NIST SRMs, which produced accurate results that agreed closely with the NIST certified values. An extended suite of 27 PFAS were also spiked into human serum and plasma samples and extracted using the Otto SPEcialist which produced accurate and precise results. The use of the Otto SPEcialist for the analysis of human biofluids for PFAS can provide laboratory efficiency while maintaining confidence in high quality results.
References
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Report on Human Expoure to Environmental Chemicals: Biomonitoring Data Tables for Environmental Chemicals. [cited 2022 March 30]. Available from: https://www.cdc.gov/exposurereport/data_tables.html
- HBM4EU Project. European Human Biomonitoring Dashboard. [cited 2022 March 30]. Available from: https://www.hbm4eu.eu/what-we-do/european-hbm-platform/eu-hbm-dashboard/
- Vorkamp K, et al. Biomarkers, Matrices and Analytical Methods Targeting Human Exposure to Chemicals Selected for a European Human Biomonitoring Initiative. Environment International. 146 (2021).
- Organtini K, Rosnack K, Lame M, Calton L. Extracting and Analyzing PFAS from Human Serum. Revised July 2021, Waters Application Note, 720007114.
720007601, April 2022