MONICA Manual, Part III: Population Survey
Section 3: Standardization of thiocyanate measurements
November 1990
This section provides details on the methods to be used for standardization of
thiocyanate measurements in the WHO MONICA Project.
Contents
© Copyright World Health Organization (WHO) 1998. All rights reserved.
Queries/comments on this section should be addressed to:
Dr D. Grafnetter and Assist. Prof. R. Poledne (Chief)
Laboratory for Atherosclerosis Research
Institute for Clinical and Experimental Medicine (IKEM)
Videnska 800
14000 Praque-4
Czech Republic
Email: rudolf.poledne@medicon.cz
Smoking habits, e.g. inhalation, may vary locally and with time; all may not be
reflected in the information collected by the smoking questionnaire. Moreover,
socio-cultural factors may affect the truthfulness of the answers. Among the objective
variables for validating smoking questionnaire responses, carboxyhaemoglobin has a
half-life of 3-4 hours and serum thiocyanate of 10-14 days. Thiocyanate is thus less
subject to short-term variation in smoking. Moreover, serum thiocyanate has been validated
as a predictor of total and coronary 15-year mortality, being either superior or equal to
the smoking questionnaire in two populations, respectively [1].
Among non-smokers the standard deviation of thiocyanate was found to be approximately
25% of the mean, and 15% among those smoking 10 or more cigarettes a day. The
"baseline" level of thiocyanate is also affected by the diet.
In MONICA, thiocyanate determinations may serve two purposes:
- to validate the smoking questionnaire data for the population and its subgroups, and
- to provide an aggregate measure of trends in population exposure to smoking.
For (a), a sufficient number of data for each sex, age and smoking category should be
collected, while for (b) four groups only at the initial and the final surveys,
respectively, would be the minimum requirement: male versus female, non-smokers versus
present smokers. The non-smokers are necessary for showing trends in the background level
dependent on the diet. Only the complete coverage of a MONICA survey sample would provide
sufficient accuracy for (a), while for (b) as little as a 20% random sample would be
suffice. For the validation of population trends in smoking, thiocyanate
obviously should be analyzed at least twice, both at the initial and the final surveys. On
the other hand, for a stratified study of the validity of the questionnaire - or
comparing questionnaires- the mid-point survey would have some merit in providing data for
extrapolation over the 10-year period. MCCs are encouraged to measure thiocyanate on all
subjects even if this was not possible in the initial survey.
1. Determination of thiocyanate in serum
When ferric ions in acid solutions are added to thiocyanate, a brownish-red complex of
ferric cyanate with an absorption peak at 455 nm is formed. Based on this reaction, RG
Bowler published a method to determine thiocyanate in serum [2].
Later, this method was adapted for Autoanalyzer II by William C. Butts et al [3]. Both are given here with the following modifications:
- In the automated method of Butts:
- the determination is run at 60 samples per hour with a sample-to-wash ratio of 8:2.
- better absorbances are obtained when the usual flow-cell of 15 mm light-path is replaced
by a 50 mm cell.
- In the manual method of Bowler, the following alterations are suggested:
in order to obtain higher absorbances, the amount of sample is increased to 2 ml to give a
final dilution of 1:3 in the reaction mixture, and
- the volumes of diluent and TCA (trichloroacetic acid) are decreased,
- the final ferric nitrate concentration is maintained at less than 10 g/l, as at higher
concentrations the absorption peek at 455 nm is distorted.
1.1 Automated method for autoanalyzer II
- Reagents:
- Ferric nitrate, 10 g/l. Dissolve 10 g of Fe (NO3 )3·9
H2O p.a. in 1.5-M nitric acid and dilute to one litre with the same acid.
Filter, store at room temperature in a dark bottle. Prepare every two weeks.
- Sodium perchlorate, 0.1-M. Dissolve 12.25 g of NaClO4 p.a.
in de-ionized water and dilute to one litre with water. Filter, add 1 ml of Brij-35 (300
g/l), mix, store in a dark bottle at +4°C.
- Dialyzer recipient. To one litre of de-ionized water add 1 ml of
Brij-35 (300 g/l), mix well.
-
- Standards:
- Stock thiocyanate standard, 1000 µmol/l. Dissolve 97.2 mg of potassium
thiocyanate (KSCN, p.a.) in de-ionized water and make up the solution to one litre with
water. The standard is stable at room temperature for two to three months.
- Working standards of 50, 100, 150, 200 and 250 µmol/l are prepared
from the stock standard by diluting with water. Working standards are not stable for more
than two weeks at room temperature. Secondary standards, prepared by adding known amounts
of thiocyanate to a serum pool can also be used instead of primary water standards if the
apparent thiocyanate concentration of the so-prepared pool had been determined reliably on
the basis of primary standards (remember that the serum pool would show its own
"thiocyanate" concentration which will be summed with the added thiocyanate
concentration).
-
- Controls:
- It is recommended that a serum pool from the blood of smokers be prepared and the
control serum in suitable portions. A frozen control stored at -20°C can be used for at
least six months.
1.2 Manual method
- Reagents:
- Ferric nitrate, 20 g/l. Dissolve 20 g of Fe (NO3 )3·9
H2O p.a. in 1.5-M nitric acid and dilute to one litre with the same acid.
Filter, store at room temperature in a dark bottle. Prepare every two weeks.
- Sodium perchlorate, 0.1-M. Dissolve 12.25 g of NaClO4 p.a.
in de-ionized water and dilute to one litre with water. Filter, and store in a dark bottle
at +4°C.
- Trichloroacetic acid, 20 per cent. Dissolve 20 g of TCA in 100 ml of
de-ionized water, filter. Store at room temperature.
-
- Standards:
- Stock thiocyanate standard, 1000 µmol/l. Dissolve 97.2 mg of potassium
thiocyanate (KSCN, p.a.) in de-ionized water and make up the solution to one litre with
water. The standard is stable for two to three months at room temperature.
- Working standards of 50, 100, 150, 200 and 250 µmol/l are prepared
from the stock standard by diluting with water. Working standards are not stable for more
than two weeks at room temperature.
- Working scheme:
- Into a centrifuge tube (preferably conical) pipette:
| standard or sample |
2 ml |
| NaC104 0.1-M solution |
1 ml |
| mix, add |
|
| TCA (20% solution) |
1 ml |
|
|
| (TCA = trichloroacetic acid) |
|
- Mix vigorously, leave to stand for 20 minutes at room temperature, then centrifuge down
the precipitated protein. The supernatant must be clear (non-turbid). Centrifugation at
5000 G or more may be necessary.
| Take: |
|
| clear supernatant |
2 ml |
| Ferric nitrate 20g/l solution |
1 ml |
Mix and measure the absorbance at 455 nm (using a spectrophotometer) or at a wavelength
in close vicinity (using a filter photometer) immediately, or within a few minutes after
mixing (if a series of samples is measured). The colour begins to fade after 30 minutes in
sunlight (which occurs more rapidly in standards than in samples).
1.3 SCN laboratory performance guidelines
Due to the broad variability of measurement procedures and the purpose to which the SCN
data is put, the guidelines for laboratory performance, relating to quality control sample
reference values, are less stringent than those for cholesterol. Bias should not exceed
10% of the reference values. The CV(%), as measured by the standard deviation of the
individual laboratories determination for a given pool divided by the reference value for
that pool and multiplied by 100, should be no greater than 5 for any pool.
- Heliövaara, M. et al. Serum thiocyanate concentration and
cigarette smoking in relation to overall mortality and to deaths from coronary heart
disease and lung cancer. J Chron Dis 1981;34:305-11.
- Bowler RG. Biochem 1944;38:385-388.
- Butts WC et al. Clin Chem 1974;20:1344-1348.