Clinical Chemistry
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Clinical Chemistry 43: 1408-1415, 1997;
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(Clinical Chemistry. 1997;43:1408-1415.)
© 1997 American Association for Clinical Chemistry, Inc.


Articles

Use of filter paper for sample collection and transport in steroid pharmacology

Christopher J. Howe and David J. Handelsmana

a Address correspondence to this author at: Andrology Unit, Department of Medicine (D02), University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia. Fax +61 2 9351 4560; e-mail djh{at}med.su.oz.au

Field studies of androgen pharmacology are complicated by the necessity to collect, process, and store blood samples in a central facility. We have assessed the feasibility of using capillary blood spots collected by fingerprick and dried on filter paper for pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamic measurements with nandrolone and testosterone RIAs modified for extracts from capillary blood spots. Assays on punched spots of 7.9-mm diameter (14.9 µL of dried blood) permitted accurate quantification of testosterone down to 0.4 nmol/L from a single spot and nandrolone down to 0.9 nmol/L from two spots. Stability of the steroids in dried blood spots to adverse environmental conditions, notably increased temperatures, was investigated both in the laboratory and in field studies of dried spots sent through the postal system. Storage or postal transport under moderate conditions appeared to have no deleterious effects on apparent androgen concentrations. However, under extreme conditions of storage at 50 °C for a week or more, or transport to a very hot tropical location, a rise in the final concentration of nandrolone, and, to a lesser extent, testosterone when corrected for tracer recovery, was noticed. These effects were largely due to apparent susceptibility of tritiated tracer, but not unlabeled androgens, to thermal degradation. In a pilot pharmacological study involving intramuscular injection of 100 mg of nandrolone decanoate in 1 mL of arachis oil, nandrolone concentrations in concurrently collected plasma as well as venous and capillary blood spots showed good agreement. Testosterone concentrations in contemporaneously collected plasma and venous blood spots also showed very good agreement. We propose that these methods may allow patients and experimental subjects to self-collect samples at remote or field locations for convenient mailing to a central laboratory for androgen assay. Applications of this methodology are now under way.


Key Words: indexing terms: fingerprick blood vs plasma sample • androgen • testosterone • nandrolone • radioimmunoassay • sample handling




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Stability of 17{alpha}-Hydroxyprogesterone in Dried Blood Spots after Autoclaving and Prolonged Storage
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L. Ramakrishnan, K. S. Reddy, and B. L. Jailkhani
Measurement of Cholesterol and Triglycerides in Dried Serum and the Effect of Storage
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S.-H. Peng, J. Segura, M. Farre, and X. de la Torre
Oral Testosterone Administration Detected by Testosterone Glucuronidation Measured in Blood Spots Dried on Filter Paper
Clin. Chem., April 1, 2000; 46(4): 515 - 522.
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