This application note presents the use of a simple sample extraction and d-SPE (dispersive solid phase extraction) cleanup where the resulting extract is analyzed by UPLC-MS/MS or APGC-MS/MS.
Health Canada requires mandatory testing for the presence of pesticide residues in cannabis before the product can be sold to consumers.1,2 The regulations are present to ensure the highest safety and quality standards possible when it comes to the supply of cannabis for medical or recreational use. To adhere to testing requirements, licensed cannabis producers must demonstrate that no unauthorized pesticides have been used on their products and that there is no contamination of the products within the limits set out by Health Canada. Currently, the target list consists of 96 pesticides, with limits of quantitation as low as 20 ppb in dried cannabis. Tandem mass spectrometry is a sensitive and selective technique. When coupled with both gas (GC) and liquid chromatography (LC), it provides a comprehensive analysis for a wide range of pesticide residues with sufficient sensitivity to meet the Health Canada regulations. The advantage of ultraperformance liquid chromatography (UPLC) coupled with tandem quadrupole mass spectrometry (MS/MS) for multi-residue pesticide analysis is widely reported.3 More recently, the use of GC-MS/MS operated at atmospheric pressure (APGC) has been shown to offer significant improvements in performance over EI for challenging pesticides, in terms of selectivity, specificity and speed of analysis.4,5 Regulations for cannabis testing will most likely evolve and possibly become even more rigorous. The use of both LC-MS/MS and GC-MS/MS ensures system flexibility that can be adapted in the event that more pesticides are regulated.
In this Application Note, we present the use of a simple sample extraction and d-SPE (dispersive solid phase extraction) cleanup where the resulting extract is analyzed by UPLC-MS/MS or APGC-MS/MS. A single workflow for the multi-residue analysis of pesticides in cannabis is demonstrated. Utilizing the universal source of the Waters Xevo TQ-S micro allows for LC and GC analyses to be completed on the same tandem quadrupole MS instrument. The performance of the method will be highlighted in terms of sensitivity, recovery, and linearity for both LC and GC analysis.
Pesticide analytical standards were purchased from LGC Standards. Mix 1 consisted of 35 pesticides at 50 ppm in acetonitrile, Mix 2 consisted of 45 pesticides at 100 ppm in acetonitrile, and Mix 3 consisted of 14 pesticides at 100 ppm in toluene. Dimethomorph was also purchased from LGC Standards at 10 ppm in acetonitrile. Benzovindiflupyr was purchased separately from Chem Service at 100 ppm in methylene chloride solution. All 96 pesticides were combined in a 1 ppm stock solution of each.
LC-MS-grade methanol, LC-MS-grade acetonitrile, and RO (reverse osmosis) water were all purchased from Fisher Scientific and were used as received. Formic acid was purchased from Waters (p/n: 186006691) and was used as received.
Helium and argon gases were obtained from Air Liquide. A Thermo Fisher Scientific vortex (0-3200 rpm), a Fisher Scientific accuSpin 400 centrifuge, a Fisher Scientific 60L gravity oven, and a Mettler Toledo AE50 analytical balance (0.1 mg) were all used in the sample preparation procedure.
The representative samples were dipped in liquid nitrogen and frozen before grinding. After freezing, but before grinding, all stems and seeds were removed from the sample. The ground sample was equilibrated to room temperature. Several 0.5-g portions of ground cannabis were weighed. The initial mass was recorded. To ensure that all the liquid nitrogen had evaporated, and an accurate sample mass was obtained, the sample sat on the scale until there was <1 mg change in mass over a 10-minute period.
The 0.5-g samples of ground cannabis were placed in a 10-mL centrifuge tube and 5 mL of LC-MS/MS-grade acetonitrile was added. The sample was then vortexed for five minutes followed by centrifugation at 5000 rpm for five minutes. One milliliter of the supernatant was removed and used in the clean-up step.
One milliliter of the supernatant from the pesticide extraction was placed in a d-SPE cartridge (150 mg MgSO4, 50 mg PSA, 50 mg C18, and 7.5 mg graphitized carbon black). The cartridge was shaken for one minute and centrifuged for five minutes at 5000 rpm. The resulting cannabis extracts were directly pipetted into clean 2-mL vials in preparation for analysis by LC-MS/MS and APGC-MS/MS.
Calibration standards were made using a stock solution of 96 pesticides (1 ppm stock). Matrix-matched calibrations were used to ensure that the signals obtained in the analysis were representative of what the signal would be in cannabis samples. Standards ranging from 1–6400 ppb were made to accommodate the different ionization efficiencies of all analytes. Pesticides with low detection limits used the lower concentration standards and the pesticides with higher detection limits used higher concentration standards for their calibration curves.
A Waters ACQUITY UPLC H-Class PLUS System coupled with a Waters Xevo TQ-S micro Tandem Quadrupole Mass Spectrometer (MS/MS) with electrospray as the ionization mode was used to carry out the analysis of 84 of the pesticides by LC-MS/MS (see Appendix A). An Agilent 7890B gas chromatograph (GC) coupled with a Waters Xevo TQ-S micro Tandem Quadrupole Mass Spectrometer was used to carry out the analysis of the remaining 12 pesticides with APGC as the ionization mode. A nitrogen generator (Peak Scientific) was used as the source of the N2 gas. MassLynx MS Software v4.2 was used for data acquisition and processing for both LC-MS/MS and GC-MS/MS methods.
Separation mode: |
Gradient |
Column: |
ACQUITY UPLC BEH C18, 1.7 μm, 2.1 × 100 mm |
Solvent A: |
Methanol |
Solvent B: |
Water |
Solvent C: |
2% formic acid in RO water |
Flow rate: |
0.500 mL/min |
Column temp.: |
60 °C |
Sample temp.: |
10 °C |
Injection volume: |
2 μL |
Time (min) |
%A |
%B |
%C |
---|---|---|---|
0 |
2% |
93% |
5 |
8 |
95% |
0% |
5 |
9 |
95% |
0% |
5 |
9.1 |
2% |
93% |
5 |
12 |
2% |
93% |
5 |
Ionization mode: |
ESI+ |
Capillary voltage: |
1.2 kV |
Cone voltage: |
30 V |
Collision energy: |
Various eV (see Appendix) |
Desolvation temp.: |
600 °C |
Source temp.: |
150 °C |
Desolvation gas flow: |
1000 L/hr |
Cone gas: |
50 L/hr |
All MS/MS parameters including precursor ion (m/z), product ion (m/z), cone voltage (V), and collision energy (CE) for the 84 pesticides analyzed by LC-MS/MS can be found in Appendix A.
GC system: |
Agilent 7890B |
Column: |
Agilent DB-5 MS (30 m × 0.250 mm × 0.25 μm) |
Carrier gas: |
Helium |
Flow rate: |
2 mL/min |
Injection type: |
Pulsed splitless |
Injector temp.: |
280 °C |
Equilibration time: |
1.5 min |
Injection volume: |
2 μL |
Makeup gas: |
Nitrogen at 350 mL/min |
Rate (°C/min) |
Temp. (°C) |
Hold (min) |
---|---|---|
– |
60 |
0.45 |
18.7 |
320 |
3.65 |
MS system: |
Xevo TQ-S micro |
Ionization mode: |
APGC+ |
Corona: |
2.0 μA |
Transfer line temp.: |
320 °C |
Source temp.: |
150 °C |
Solvent delay: |
3.5 min |
Acquisition mode: |
MRM |
All MS/MS parameters including precursor ion (m/z), product ion (m/z), cone voltage (V), and collision energy (CE) for the 12 pesticides analyzed by GC-MS/MS can be found in Appendix B.
The UPLC and GC parameters were optimized to ensure adequate separation of pesticide peaks with reduced background noise and optimum peak shapes. Upon completion of the sample run, a “multiplier” must be input into the UPLC and GC to account for the dilutions and sample mass weighed. The following formula is used to calculate the multiplier:
where Vextraction is the total volume of the extract used (5 mL) and Mass is the mass of the dried cannabis weighed for the extraction (0.5 g). This will convert all results in ppb in cannabis (µg of pesticide/g of cannabis).
To validate the method, sample spikes were performed on ground cannabis prior to the extraction and clean-up. The pesticide mixes were spiked into 0.5 g of fresh ground “pesticide-free” cannabis samples. Extraction and clean-up were performed resulting in 2000, 1000, 500, 250, 100, 50, 25, 10, 5, and 2 ppb spiked samples. After applying the multiplier (described above), the concentration of the pesticides mentioned above are 10x higher in the cannabis sample.
The spiking procedure was performed at nine different spike concentrations for each pesticide to obtain the limit of quantification (LOQ) for each individual pesticide. Once the LOQ was established, three spikes of each analyte at their respective LOQ were performed to obtain average spike recoveries and relative standard deviations (RSD) for each pesticide individually.
As shown in Table 1, spike recoveries for all pesticides at their LOQs averaged between 81.7% and 117.6%. The acceptable % recovery limits for method validation are between 70% and 120%. Low relative standard deviations (RSD) were also reported for all 96 spike recoveries (all <20%). The acceptable RSD for method validation is <20%.
It should be noted that the recovery for daminozide is determined separately since it is strongly retained by the PSA sorbent. For spike recoveries and to test for the presence of daminozide in cannabis samples, a separate LC-MS/MS run is performed following sample extraction but before clean-up.
The LOQs were calculated for all 96 pesticides. To determine the LOQs, pesticide-free cannabis samples were spiked with various concentrations of standards ranging from 1–2000 ppb. Sample spike recoveries between 80% and 120% were deemed acceptable. Once the lowest acceptable spike recoveries (lowest concentrated spike) were determined for each pesticide, three separate runs were performed and only after all three runs fell within the acceptable limits was the LOQ established. As shown in Table 2, all LOQ values are within Health Canada’s limits.
Using the LC-MS/MS method, 84 pesticides were analyzed. The compounds analyzed by LC-MS/MS and the parameters used are listed in Table 2 and Appendix A. Representative MRM chromatograms for the pesticides acetamiprid (50 ppb), cyprodinil (25 ppb), fenoxycarb (25 ppb), and tetrachlorvinphos (25 ppb) in a pesticide-free extracted cannabis matrix are shown in Figure 1.
Matrix-matched calibration curves were generated using pesticide-free extracted cannabis. An example of the calibration curves for the pesticides acetamiprid, cyprodinil, fenoxycarb, and tetrachlorvinphos are shown in Figure 2. Linear calibration curves (R2>0.990) for all pesticides were obtained over the range tested as shown in the figure.
Analysis of pesticide residues in cannabis also required the use of GC-MS/MS to meet the Canadian pesticide regulations. A complete list of compounds analyzed by GC-MS/MS and the parameters used is provided in Table 2 and Appendix B. Example chromatograms for endosulfan alpha and fenvalerate are shown in Figure 3.
An example of the calibration curves for the pesticides endosulfan alpha and fenvalerate are shown in Figure 4. Linear calibration curves (R2>0.990) for both pesticides were obtained over the range tested, as shown in the figure.
The simple sample extraction and d-SPE clean-up method followed by UPLC-MS/MS and GC-MS/MS analysis provides a rapid, sensitive, and robust workflow for the determination of the Canadian pesticide list in challenging cannabis matrices. Complex multi-residue pesticide analysis in a cannabis matrix was demonstrated using both UPLC and APGC analysis on the same tandem quadrupole instrument (Xevo TQ-S micro) with detection at the maximum action levels for each of the 96 pesticides in the Canadian pesticide list. Having the flexibility of universal source architecture to provide access to both UPLC-MS/MS and GC-MS/MS on the same instrument, allows for an increase of laboratory efficiency, while maintaining required sensitivity and repeatability. This method meets the action levels for the Canadian pesticide list and mycotoxins in cannabis matrices.
MS/MS parameters for pesticides using UPLC.
MS/MS parameters for pesticides using GC.
720006711, November 2019