by
lmh » Mon Jul 10, 2017 1:42 pm
I'm with rb6banjo and Marcus_Laeubli on this one.
There are two possible reasons why your straight-line fit hasn't gone through the origin: (1) you've fitted a straight line through a set of points that actually follow a curve; (2) the points do, sort-of, follow a straight line, but the errors on the high-concentrations have pulled the line a long way from where it should be for the low concentrations. Weighting mitigates the second problem (though it cannot solve it). Weighting will tend to improve the percentage accuracy of the low-concentration points at the expense of the high (which start off over-accurate). Weighting does nothing to address the first problem: curvy calibrations.
There are lots of reasons why a calibration curve might not be straight. As an easily-understood example, imagine what happens if some component of the glassware you've used (your vial) or the instrument has a capacity to bind the analyte. If binding-sites are limited, it will simply titrate out a portion of the analyte. Say it can remove 4pmoles, and you inject 5, 10, 15, 20pmoles. Your actual calibration curve will be for the remaining 1, 6, 11, 16pmoles, and will hit the x-axis at 4 pmoles, therefore giving a negative intercept with the y-axis, and potentially giving negative results.
Since fiddling with the calibration curve won't make the problem go away, I think Marcus is right: it is not safe to extrapolate a limit of quantification below the lowest point for which real data exist. The functional LOQ is the higher of two values: the lowest injected standard, and the calculated LOQ derived from the existing experimental data.
Incidentally, the S/N approach is a surrogate in which we're really making the following argument:
(1) I would like to quantify to a precision of +/- X%
(2) I believe that precision is related to signal:noise ratio, because noise creates the variation that leads to loss of precision
(3) I believe that a S/N ratio of Y corresponds to a precision of X
(4) Therefore the point at which I can achieve S/N Y is my LOQ
This chain of argument falls apart if the relationship between S/N and concentration differs from the relationship between precision and concentration. Sadly, in some detectors the two are very different.
The most obvious example is a mass spec where selectivity can be so high that there is no noise. In this case a very small peak will have an infinite S/N ratio, but clearly it hasn't got infinite precision. The S/N method, while greatly used, was based on noise being present, genuinely measurable, and the major contributor to overall precision - assumptions that are not true in most mass specs. I'd argue that the S/N method should only be used on a signal that is above zero at all times.
To avoid emotive arguments about the relative merits of different approaches to finding a LOQ, I'm quite certain that the best thing to do is treat them iteratively: work out your expected LOQ from your current test-runs, then re-inject closer to the new expected LOQ and check it again, and continue until you arrive at a situation where you are making genuine injections that just exceed your expected precision. We can all disagree about details of how to calculate LOQs, but I think we all agree on the value of real injections to prove it works.
Incidentally, a LOQ depends totally on the matrix, including any coeluting stuff found in real samples.