Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1212472 Journal of Chromatography B 2014 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Non-cholesterol sterols (NCS) are used as surrogate markers of cholesterol metabolism.•NCS analysis methodology is highly variable across different research groups.•Variability in NCS methodology hampers comparisons across research groups.•We examined the critical steps in the extraction, analysis and reporting of NCS.•A cross-comparison program is needed for the standardization of NCS analysis.

Non-cholesterol sterols (NCS) are used as surrogate markers of cholesterol metabolism which can be measured from a single blood sample. Cholesterol precursors are used as markers of endogenous cholesterol synthesis and plant sterols are used as markers of cholesterol absorption. However, most aspects of NCS analysis show wide variability among researchers within the area of biomedical research. This variability in methodology is a significant contributor to variation between reported NCS values and hampers the confidence in comparing NCS values across different research groups, as well as the ability to conduct meta-analyses. This paper summarizes the considerations and conclusions of a workshop where academic and industrial experts met to discuss NCS measurement. Highlighted is why each step in the analysis of NCS merits critical consideration, with the hopes of moving toward more standardized and comparable NCS analysis methodologies. Alkaline hydrolysis and liquid–liquid extraction of NCS followed by parallel detection on GC-FID and GC–MS is proposed as an ideal methodology for the bio-analysis of NCS. Furthermore the importance of cross-comparison or round robin testing between various groups who measure NCS is critical to the standardization of NCS measurement.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
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