JCCRM211
JCCRM211
JCCRM211
Certificate of Analysis
Certified Reference Material for Measurement of
Total Cholesterol in Human Serum
JCCRM 211-3
Intended use
JCCRM 211-3 is a certified reference material intended for use in evaluating the accuracy of total cholesterol
assays as part of clinical laboratory tests and validating secondary or working reference materials.
Preparation
JCCRM 211-3 was prepared according to the protocol established by the National Committee for Clinical
Laboratory Standards (NCCLS) [1] to ensure that, while avoiding lipoprotein degradation, its properties would be
the same as those of fresh serum.
Product specifications
Configuration: Frozen liquid
Levels and contents: Two concentration levels: Medium concentration (white cap) and
High concentration (black cap)
A single set of JCCRM 211-3 consists of four vials: two vials for each of the two
concentration levels, and each vial contains 0.5 ml of human serum.
Pipette
Thawing After
While placing vials cap-side tightening
up, leave them to stand until the cap, mix the contents by Sample cup
the temperature of the serum inverting the vial at
reaches near room temperature. least 20 times
Shipping date:
Characteristics
The characteristics of JCCRM 211-3 are as follows:
JCCRM 211-3M JCCRM 211-3H
3
Density (g/cm , 25°C) 1.0220 1.0235 Pycnometer method
Total protein (g/dl) 6.8 7.2 Biuret method
Albumin (g/dl) 4.2 4.5 BCG method
Triglycerides (mg/dl) 117 153 Enzymatic method
Free fatty acids (mEq/l) 0.43 0.46 Enzymatic method
Phospholipids (mg/dl) 217 252 Enzymatic method
Cholesterol ester ratio (%) 77 78 Enzymatic method
Lp(a) (mg/dl) 8.0 5.8 Latex agglutination
turbidimetric method
Uric Acid (mg/dl) 5.3 5.8 Uricase-POD method
Total bilirubin (mg/dl) 0.7 0.6 Vanadic acid oxidation
method
Turbidity Abs 0.2 0.2 Optical density method
710nm, 1cm
MRB1-021(E)
3
Agarose gel
electrophoresis pattern
1. Comparison of total cholesterol values measured by the CDC reference method and ID/MS method
The total cholesterol concentrations measured by the CDC reference methods were higher for both levels. The
reason for this is that the color fixing agent (Liebermann-Burchard reagent) used in the CDC reference method
reacts with compounds other than cholesterol.
Table 2: NIST SRM 1951b total cholesterol concentrations measured by ID/MS (mg/dL)
2.26
2.24
Mean + U
mean ± U (mg/g)
2.22
2.2
Mean
2.18
2.16 Mean - U
2.14
2.12
2.1
NIST LGC NRCCRM NIMC PTB NMI
REFERENCES
[1] "Preparation and Validation of Commutable Frozen Serum Pools as Secondary Reference Materials for
Cholesterol Measurement Procedures; Approved Guideline," NCCLS Publication C37-A, National
Committee for Clinical Laboratory Standard, Wayne, PA, (1999).
[2] Cohen A., et al.: Total Serum Cholesterol by Isotope Dilution/Mass Spectrometry; A Candidate Definitive
Method, Clin. Chem. 26 (1980), pp. 854-860.
[3] Ellerbe, P., Meiselman, S., Sniegoski, L.T., Welch, M.J., and White, V.E., "Determination of Serum
Cholesterol by a Modification of the Isotope Dilution Mass Spectrometric Definitive Method," Anal. Chem.
61 (1989), pp. 1718-1723.
[4] Abell, L.L., Levy, B.B., Brodie, R.B., and Kendall, F.E., "Simplified Method for the Estimation of Total
Cholesterol in Serum and Demonstration of Its Specificity," J. Biol. Chem. 195 (1952), pp. 357-360.
[5] Cooper, G.R., Smith, S.J., Duncan, I.W., et al., "The Interlaboratory Testing of the Transfer Ability of a
Candidate Reference Method for Total Cholesterol in Serum," Clin. Chem. 32 (1986), pp. 921-929.
[6] Guide to the Expression of Uncertainty in Measurement, ISBN 92-67-10188-9, 1st Ed., ISO. Geneva,
Switzerland (corrected and reprinted, 1995).
Contact information
MRB1-021(E)