Journal of Food Protection (Apr 2023)

Secondary Validation of a Liquid Scintillation Counter-method for Residues of Tetracyclines, Beta-lactams, and Sulfonamides in Seafood/Aquaculture Products

  • Ololade Olabukola Aderibigbe,
  • Bashar Bachaka Adamu,
  • Ijeoma Oge Osaji,
  • Augustus Olawale Babarinde,
  • Charles Uchenna Nwachukwu,
  • Abimbola Adegboye,
  • James Jacob Sasanya,
  • Mojisola Christianah Adeyeye

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 86, no. 4
p. 100055

Abstract

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This study was carried out to validate the liquid scintillation counter method (Charm II) for the detection of tetracyclines, beta-lactams, and sulfonamides (Sulfa drugs) in a range of Aquaculture Products. This method of validation followed primary validation performed in Belgium and was therefore transferred to Nigeria but further validation was required, and this was performed according to the European Commission Decision 2002/657/EC. Method performance was based on the detection capability (CCβ), specificity (cross-reactivity), robustness, repeatability, and reproducibility for the detection of antimicrobial residues. Seafood and aquaculture samples used for the validation process included tilapia (Oreochromis niloctus), catfish (Siluriformes), African threadfin (Galeoides decadactylus), common carp (Cyprinus carpio), and shrimps (penaeidae). These were spiked with varying concentrations of tetracyclines, beta-lactams, and sulfonamides standards to determine the validation parameters. Results of the validation showed tetracyclines had detection capabilities of 50 µg/kg, while beta-lactams and sulphonamides had detection capabilities of 25 µg/kg. The relative standard deviation for both repeatability and reproducibility studies ranged between 1.36% and 10.50%. Results of this study are suitable and comparable to the initial validation reports from the primary validation of Charm II tests for the detection of antimicrobial residues in a range of aquaculture fish conducted in Belgium. The results also prove the specificity, ruggedness, and reliability of the radio receptor assay tests for detection of the various antimicrobials in aquaculture products. This could be used in seafood/aquaculture products monitoring in Nigeria.

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