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The use of rapid mass spectrometry techniques, such as atmospheric-solids-analysis-probe mass spectrometry (ASAP-MS), in the analysis of metabolite patterns in clinical samples holds significant promise for developing new diagnostic tools and enabling rapid disease screening. The rapid measurement times, ease of use, and relatively low cost of ASAP-MS makes it an appealing option for use in clinical settings. However, despite the potential of such approaches, a number of important experimental considerations are often overlooked. As well as instrument-specific choices and settings, these include the treatment of background noise and/or contaminant peaks in the mass spectra, and the influence of consumables, different users, and batch effects more generally. The present study assesses the impact of these various factors on measurement accuracy and reproducibility, using human brain and cerebrospinal fluid samples as examples. Based on our results, we make a series of recommendations relating to optimisation of measurement and cleaning protocols, consumable selection, and batch effect detection and correction, in order to optimise the reliability and reproducibility of ASAP-MS measurements in clinical settings.

Original publication

DOI

10.1039/d5an00166h

Type

Journal article

Journal

Analyst

Publication Date

15/05/2025