This study aimed to determine and compare the perception, painfulness, and usability of the minimally invasive dried blood spot (DBS) collections from fingertip versus upper arm from different athlete populations: males and females representing sports dependent on hand/arm, sports less dependent on hand/arm and para‐athletes. To accomplish this, 108 national level athletes from Denmark were recruited (♀ = 49, ♂ = 59, 25 ± 6 years; mean ± SD) and 11 Doping Control Officers (DCOs) collected manual fingerprick DBS (HemaSpot HF) and automated upper‐arm DBS (Tasso‐M20) from each athlete. Athletes and DCOs responded to questionnaires regarding the perception of sample collection procedures. On a 0–10 scale, the athletes reported a low pain score and a very good general experience for both sampling sites, but following upper‐arm DBS collection, the associated pain was rated lower (−0.4 ± 1.6, p < 0.05), and the general experience rated better (+0.6 ± 2.3, p ≤ 0.001) than after the fingerprick DBS collection. The DCOs rated the general experience with the upper‐arm DBS collection better (+1.6 ± 1.1, p ≤ 0.01) than the fingerprick DBS collection, partly because problems occurred more frequently during the DBS collection from the fingertip (28%) than from the upper arm (6%). In conclusion, it appears that DBS sampling is affiliated with minimal sensation of pain and is preferred by both DCOs and athletes, independent of gender and discipline, over conventional sample collection methods. Collection of DBS from the upper arm was preferred over fingerprick by both athletes and DCOs.
An online microfluidics-mass spectrometry platform was developed for determining proteotypic peptides from in-solution digested samples. Accelerated and selective sample cleanup was achieved by integrating proteotypic epitope peptide immunoextraction with nano liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (online IE-nanoLC-MS/MS). Ten individually prepared 180 μm inner diameter capillaries with ethylene glycol dimethacrylate-co-vinyl azlactone (EDMA-co-VDM) monoliths were immobilized with anti-protein antibodies that are used in routine immunoassays of the intact small cell lung cancer biomarker ProGRP. The resulting AB columns provided linearity correlation coefficients of 0.96−0.99 for protein amounts and concentrations of 10 pg to 5 ng and 0.5−250 ng/mL, respectively. The columns/platform gave relative peak area RSDs below 15%. The IE-nanoLC-MS/MS platform provided a limit of detection (LOD) of 520 pg/mL of ProGRP in human serum. The approach was applicable for other matrixes and proteins, i.e., primary glioblastoma cells and endogenous αV integrin chain. Thus, EDMA-co-VDM monoliths immobilized with antibodies are suited for automated peptide capture in microfluidic formats.
While misuse of testosterone esters is widespread in elite and recreational sports, direct detection of intact testosterone esters in doping control samples is hampered by the rapid hydrolysis by esterases present in the blood. With dried blood spot (DBS) as sample matrix, continued degradation of the esters is avoided due to inactivation of the hydrolase enzymes in dried blood. Here we have developed the method further for detection of testosterone esters in DBS with focus on robustness and applicability in doping control. To demonstrate the method's feasibility, DBS samples from men receiving two intramuscular injections of Sustanon ® 250 (n = 9) or placebo (n = 10), were collected, transported and stored prior to analysis, to mimic a doping control scenario. The presented nanoLC-HRMS/MS method appeared reliable and suitable for direct detection of four testosterone esters (testosterone decanoate, isocaproate, phenylpropionate and propionate) after extraction from DBS.Sustanon ® was detected in all subjects for at least five days, with detection window up to 14 days for three of the esters. Evaluation of analyte stability showed that while storage at room temperature is tolerated well for a few days, testosterone esters are highly stable (> 18 months) in DBS when stored in frozen conditions. Collectively, these findings demonstrate the applicability of DBS sampling in doping control for detection of steroid esters. The fast collection and reduced shipment costs of DBS compared to urine and standard blood samples, respectively, will allow more frequent and/or large-scale testing to increase detection and deterrence.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.