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- Posts: 1889
- Joined: Fri Aug 08, 2008 11:54 am
You asked about whether you should take just the three lowest points for calculating your LOQ. The problem is that you're then calculating a standard deviation based on only three points, which means it will have a very large error (I always struggle to get my head around errors-on-errors, but the s.d. value has its own s.d., and in this case, you're trying to find out the average variability in low measurements, and it's the error on this variability that's causing variable LOQ values. Your aim is to have a LOQ that's reliable and accurate, rather than just a meaningless number that jumps up and down from batch to batch).
It is this problem with measuring s.d. at low concentration that prompts regulators to ask for 7 replicates of a point at the LOQ.
My own entirely theoretical and personal viewpoint is that if you have 7 different points, all fairly close to the LOQ and scattered just above and below it, your estimate of the s.d. close to the LOQ should be as good as if you have 7 points with the same concentration. It's not the lack of replication of each point that's the problem, it's a lack of overall replicates. Points a very long way from the LOQ are, of course, of less value (and in a regulated environment the personal opinion of lmh is worth nothing: you have to do what the regulators ask).
Of course I couldn't agree more with Peter Apps point about measuring samples close to the LOQ. Samples are very different to clean standards. You only need a nearby contaminant peak to mess up a LOQ completely.
