Office of Dietary Supplements, National Institutes of Health, 6100 Executive Blvd, Bethesda, MD, 20892, USA.
Chemical Sciences Division, National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), 100 Bureau Drive, Gaithersburg, MD, 20899, USA.
Anal Bioanal Chem. 2019 Jan;411(1):97-127. doi: 10.1007/s00216-018-1473-0. Epub 2018 Dec 1.
For over 40 years, food-matrix certified reference materials (CRMs) have been available for determination of trace element content, and a wide variety of materials are available from most producers of CRMs. However, the availability of food-matrix CRMs for organic nutrients has been more limited. The European Commission (EC) Bureau Communautaire de Référence (BCR) and the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) introduced food-matrix CRMs with values assigned for vitamins and other organic nutrients such as fatty acids and carotenoids in the 1990s. The number of organic nutrients for which values were assigned has increased significantly in the past decade, and the approach and analytical methods used for assignment of the certified values have also evolved. Recently, dietary supplement-matrix CRMs such as multivitamin tablets with values assigned for vitamins and carotenoids, and fish and plant oils with values assigned for fatty acids have appeared. The development, evolution, and improvement of food- and dietary supplement-matrix CRMs for determination of vitamins, carotenoids, and fatty acids are described, with emphasis on CRMs made available in the past 10 years. Recent food and dietary supplement CRMs for the determination of organic nutrients include infant formula, multivitamin tablets, milk and egg powders, breakfast cereal, meat homogenate, blueberries, soy flour, fish and plant oils, dry cat food, and protein drink powder. Many of these food- and supplement-matrix CRMs have values assigned for over 80 organic and inorganic nutrients, toxic elements, proximates, and contaminants. The review provides a critical assessment of the challenges and evolving improvements in the production and the analytical methods used for value assignment of these CRMs. The current status and future needs for additional food- and dietary supplement-matrix CRMs for organic nutrients are also discussed. Graphical abstract Food Composition Triangle with currently-available food-matrix certified reference materials (CRMs) for the determination of organic nutrients positioned according to fat, protein, and carbohydrate composition.
四十多年来,食品基质认证标准物质(CRM)一直可用于测定微量元素含量,并且大多数 CRM 生产商都提供了各种各样的材料。然而,食品基质有机营养素 CRM 的可用性更为有限。欧盟委员会(EC)Bureau Communautaire de Référence(BCR)和美国国家标准与技术研究院(NIST)在 20 世纪 90 年代推出了具有维生素和其他有机营养素(如脂肪酸和类胡萝卜素)赋值的食品基质 CRM。在过去的十年中,赋值值的有机营养素数量显著增加,赋值的认证值的方法和分析方法也在不断发展。最近,出现了膳食补充剂基质 CRM,例如多种维生素片,具有赋值的维生素和类胡萝卜素,以及赋值的脂肪酸的鱼油和植物油。本文描述了用于测定维生素、类胡萝卜素和脂肪酸的食品和膳食补充剂基质 CRM 的开发、演变和改进,重点介绍了过去 10 年提供的 CRM。最近用于测定有机营养素的食品和膳食补充剂 CRM 包括婴儿配方奶粉、多种维生素片、牛奶和蛋粉、早餐麦片、肉匀浆、蓝莓、大豆粉、鱼油和植物油、干粮猫粮和蛋白饮料粉。这些食品和补充剂基质 CRM 中的许多都具有 80 多种有机和无机营养素、有毒元素、近似值和污染物的赋值。本文批判性地评估了在这些 CRM 的生产和赋值分析方法方面的挑战和不断改进。还讨论了对有机营养素的其他食品和膳食补充剂基质 CRM 的当前状态和未来需求。