Publication | Open Access
Measurement of ascorbic acid in human plasma and serum: stability, intralaboratory repeatability, and interlaboratory reproducibility
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1996
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Taa MeasurementTaa ConcentrationMetabolomic ProfilingAscorbic AcidBioanalysisAnalytical ChemistryClinical ChemistryLaboratory MedicineChromatographyBiochemistryInterlaboratory ReproducibilityChemical PathologyMetabolomicsChromatographic AnalysisPharmacologyPhysiologyHuman PlasmaMetabolismMedicinePharmacokinetics
We demonstrate that total ascorbic acid (TAA, the sum of ascorbic acid and dehydroascorbic acid) in properly prepared human plasma is stable at -70 degrees C for at least 6 years when preserved with dithiothreitol. TAA in human plasma or serum preserved with metaphosphoric acid degrades slowly, at the rate of no more than 1% per year. As assessed from our stability data and from data obtained from 23 laboratories over a period of > 2 years, the intralaboratory repeatability of TAA measurement is approximately 2 mumol/L, irrespective of TAA concentration. Nonchromatographic analytical methods involving dinitrophenylhydrazine and 0-phenylenediamine yield biased results relative to chromatographic methods. Within groups of laboratories that use roughly similar analytical methods, the interlaboratory measurement reproducibility CV for TAA is 15%.