| Meet New Requirements for Melamine Analysis at 1µg/g in Infant Formula |
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![]() Meet New Requirements for Melamine Analysis at 1µg/g in Infant FormulaEasily meet FDA requirements with simple, highly reproducible GC/MS method for 1µg/g melamine in infant formula.
Melamine is a nitrogen-rich industrial compound used in the manufacture of plastics, flame-resistant products, and cleaning agents. It is not a legal food additive; however, it has been added to food products in order to falsely represent the amount of protein present, as protein level is often determined using simple, nonspecific nitrogen content assays (Figure 1). Melamine is not considered toxic alone at low doses; however, illnesses and deaths have been traced to exposure to melamine in the presence of cyanuric acid. In response the escalating health concerns surrounding melamine, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recently set the safety threshold for melamine and related compounds in infant foods at 1µg/g. This level is significantly lower than the previously published minimum reporting levels (MRLs) for other commodities (10?g/g in pet foods and 2.5?g/g in human foods) and has led to an immediate need for more sensitive methodology. Here we adapted the FDA GC/MS procedure originally for higher MRL commodities into a highly reproducible method for the low level detection required for analyzing infant formula.(1)
Detailed Procedure for Infant Formula Now AvailableMatrix spikes were prepared in control infant formula at 0.5µg/g, 1µg/g, and 5µg/g (dry formula was prepared according to label instructions prior to fortification). Standards were prepared in extracted matrix at on-column concentrations equivalent to those of fortified samples, in order to minimize possible matrix effects.(2,3,4) Samples and standards were derivatized according to the FDA method; complete preparation details are available at www.restek.com/melamine. Analyses were performed on a Shimadzu QP 2010 Plus GC/MS equipped with an AOC 20i+s auto injector and sampler. GC conditions are shown in the figures; masses analyzed are shown in Table I. An Rxi®-5Sil MS analytical column with a 5m Integra-Guard™ integrated guard column was used for analysis. The integrated guard column was chosen since it protects the analytical column from matrix contamination with no risk of leaking.
Highly Reproducible Retention Times Assure Accurate Peak IDsThis method successfully detected melamine and cyanuric acid to the low levels required for the analysis of infant formula (Figure 2). Highly reproducible chromatographic separation was achieved and was critical for compound identification, since several quantitation ions were also found in other peaks. The FDA method requires retention times to be within 0.05 minutes for compound identification. This was easily achieved using the Rxi®-5Sil MS column, which produced highly reproducible results even after the approximately 150 injections made during method establishment (Table II).
The analysis of melamine and related compounds in infant formula is challenging since it has the lowest MRL of all commodities and because its high sugar content results in significant matrix interferences. Due to these factors, reliable retention time identification was critical for compound identification. Using the Rxi®-5Sil MS column, highly reproducible retention times were achieved and target analytes were reliably detected at 1µg/g in infant formula. Successful establishment of this method for lower level MRL commodities and packaging of all the required components into a single kit with detailed instructions provides analytical laboratories with a simple solution for meeting new FDA food safety guidelines for melamine. For complete analytical details, click here. (460k PDF)
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