1 research outputs found
Results of an Interlaboratory Comparison of Analytical Methods for Contaminants of Emerging Concern in Water
An evaluation of existing analytical
methods used to measure contaminants
of emerging concern (CECs) was performed through an interlaboratory
comparison involving 25 research and commercial laboratories. In total,
52 methods were used in the single-blind study to determine method
accuracy and comparability for 22 target compounds, including pharmaceuticals,
personal care products, and steroid hormones, all at ng/L levels in
surface and drinking water. Method biases ranged from <10% to well
over 100% in both matrixes, suggesting that while some methods are
accurate, others can be considerably inaccurate. In addition, the
number and degree of outliers identified suggest a high degree of
variability may be present between methods currently in use. Three
compounds, ciprofloxacin, 4-nonylphenol (NP), and 4-<i>tert</i>-octylphenol (OP), were especially difficult to measure accurately.
While most compounds had overall false positive rates of ≤5%,
bisphenol A, caffeine, NP, OP, and triclosan had false positive rates
>15%. In addition, some methods reported false positives for 17β-estradiol
and 17α-ethynylestradiol in unspiked drinking water and deionized
water, respectively, at levels higher than published predicted no-effect
concentrations for these compounds in the environment. False negative
rates were also generally <5%; however, rates were higher for the
steroid hormones and some of the more challenging compounds, such
as ciprofloxacin. The elevated false positive/negative rates of some
analytes emphasize the susceptibility of many current methods to blank
contamination, misinterpretation of background interferences, and/or
inappropriate setting of detection/quantification levels for analysis
at low ng/L levels. The results of both comparisons were collectively
assessed to identify parameters that resulted in the best overall
method performance. Liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry
coupled with the calibration technique of isotope dilution were able
to accurately quantify most compounds with an average bias of <10%
for both matrixes. These findings suggest that this method of analysis
is suitable at environmentally relevant levels for most of the compounds
studied. This work underscores the need for robust, standardized analytical
methods for CECs to improve data quality, increase comparability between
studies, and help reduce false positive and false negative rates