1. Biosafety Level 2 cabinet UV-C light exposure of sports antidoping human urine samples does not affect the stability of selected prohibited substances
- Author
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Ibrahim Al-Mohannadi, Sofia Salama, Aisha Al-Wahaibi, Najib Dbes, Souhila Mahieddine, Rodrigo Aguilera, Ahmad Nofal, Sven Christian Voss, Mohammed Al Maadheed, Maryam Al-Mohannadi, Safa Khelifi, Ariadni Vonaparti, Noora Al-Sowaidi, Khalifa Al-Hamad, Costas Georgakopoulos, Wadha Masoud Abushreeda, Amal Saleh, and Wesal El-Saftawy
- Subjects
2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Urinalysis ,Ultraviolet Rays ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Urine ,01 natural sciences ,Analytical Chemistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Anabolic Agents ,Biosafety level ,medicine ,Environmental Chemistry ,Humans ,030216 legal & forensic medicine ,Spectroscopy ,Light exposure ,Doping in Sports ,Chromatography ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Chemistry ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Containment of Biohazards ,0104 chemical sciences ,Substance Abuse Detection - Abstract
The current study examined the stability of several antidoping prohibited substances analytes in urine after 15-min exposure to UV-C light in a Biosafety Level 2 cabinet. The urine matrices were exposed within the original antidoping bottles with the aim to destroy DNA/RNA and possible SARS CoV-2. The analytes small molecules Phase I and Phase II metabolites and peptides, in total 444, endogenous, internal standards, and prohibited substances, pH, and specific gravity in urine were studied. The accredited analytical methods were used by Anti-Doping Laboratory Qatar for the comparison of data of the same urine samples analyzed with and without UV-C exposure. In the study conditions, no problems of stability were detected in the substances spiked in the urine samples exposed in the UV-C irradiation.
- Published
- 2020