At Neoteryx, we work with top scientists and researchers to help facilitate and promote their revolutionary work using Mitra® microsampling devices and Volumetric Absorptive Microsampling technology.
In this interview, he provides insight on his work using VAMS®, plus some guidance for other scientists and researchers who may want to follow his lead. His remarks have been edited for clarity and length.
One of the latest projects carried out by the research group of Pharmaco-Toxicological Analysis (PTA Lab), headed by Professor Laura Mercolini at the Department of Pharmacy and Biotechnology (FaBiT) of the Alma Mater Studiorum - University of Bologna, focused on the analysis of several compounds in biological matrices sampled through innovative microsampling strategies.
After carefully tuning all the parameters involved in sampling, storage, and extraction, we focused on an in-depth stability study. One of the main bits of information we wanted to obtain from this research was the possible stability enhancement of several molecules in samples collected by dried microsampling. Comparing it with the results obtained from classical matrices in fluid form stored at controlled temperatures allowed us to evaluate pros and cons of each approach.
One of the common threads of the studies we have undertaken so far on some compound classes has been the stability enhancement. We observed how, for many compounds prone to degradation in fluid samples, this phenomenon was blocked or at least slowed down when classic samples were turned into microsamples in solid form.
Consequently, we decided to exploit this advantage to broaden the set of tested compounds, especially those featuring intrinsic low stability. There are many bioanalytical fields in which the pre-analytical steps could potentially jeopardize results reliability due to possible false negatives caused by the degradation of compounds in the samples before analysis.
All the useful preliminary information on the devices had already been studied in depth by the PTA Lab research group at the beginning of our research using VAMS®. Since then, we have been able to focus on the development of methodologies aimed at quali-quantitative analysis in such microsamples.
Biomarker analysis by chromatography and mass spectrometry can sometimes be tricky, especially when dealing with biological samples. But in this regard, VAMS® technology has allowed us a rapid and effective tuning and validation process, providing a boost to all the optimization steps. In this way, we were able to concentrate on the stability study with a solid and reliable methodology available.
One of the greatest advantages I have been able to appreciate more about VAMS® technology is the simplicity and rapidity of use, while maintaining high performance and guaranteeing the reliability of quali-quantitative analytical data.
This allows us, whenever we are dealing with experimental design and development of procedures within the context of a new research, to envisage a large number of experimental assays. This allows us to obtain results in shorter timeframes and at the same time to finely optimise each single parameter involved in all the pre-analytical and analytical steps, tailoring ad-hoc, high-performance methodologies each time.
One of the biggest surprises within this work was the possibility of obtaining sufficiently clean extracts by fine-tuning extraction solvents, in order to find the best compromise between extraction yield and sample clean-up. This has led us to a further simplification of the procedures and the reduction of total analysis time.
It is my opinion that in the next few years VAMS® could become an interesting part of the sampling landscape, and full automation will become the next frontier for its use.
Despite its relatively recent introduction, in the last years VAMS® has already contributed to several bioanalytical success stories.
Until now, the main field for VAMS® application is the monitoring of small drug molecules and almost all the work done deals with this kind of analytes. However, a few different applications have begun to appear, from the analysis of peptides and proteins, to the forensic analysis of drugs of abuse and anti-doping testing.
In just few years, VAMS® has come a long way, but a lot of work has still to be done both in the academic and the industrial communities. In my opinion, the results obtained recently by the PTA Lab research group and the whole bioanalytical community in the framework of microsampling are very promising and offer interesting perspectives for the scientific framework.
When dealing with cutting-edge approaches like microsampling, scientists should keep in mind that data integrity and results reliability must come at the first place. In order to obtain sound and robust features in terms of quali-quantitative results, methodical approach to validation and bridging studies is fundamental.
Good result agreement between classical methods and newly developed ones will strongly corroborate their actual reliability when put into practice in the real world out of the laboratory. Also, I feel it is important to ‘convince’ the people who will have to implement such techniques, that microsampling is the ultimate way ahead to break free from obsolete and troublesome practices.