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Screening for Melamine, Cyanuric Acid, and Dicyandiamidein Powdered Milk and Infant Formula Using Mass Detection

Applications | 2016 | WatersInstrumentation
LC/MS, LC/SQ
Industries
Food & Agriculture
Manufacturer
Waters

Summary

Significance of the Topic


Melamine, cyanuric acid, and dicyandiamide are nitrogen‐rich compounds that have been linked to deliberate adulteration of protein‐based foodstuffs, such as powdered milk and infant formula. In combination, melamine and cyanuric acid can form insoluble crystals causing renal failure. Regulatory bodies enforce stringent tolerable daily intake limits (e.g., 0.2 mg/kg bw for melamine and analogues, 1 mg/kg bw for dicyandiamide), driving the need for rapid, sensitive screening methods in food safety and quality control.

Study Objectives and Overview


This application note describes the development of a fast, robust UPLC–MS screening method for melamine, cyanuric acid, and dicyandiamide in powdered and liquid infant formula. Key objectives included achieving baseline separation within three minutes, eliminating expensive isotopic standards, simplifying sample preparation, and offering an economical alternative to conventional LC–MS/MS assays.

Methodology and Instrumentation


Standard solutions of each analyte were prepared from 1000 mg/L stocks and diluted to generate calibration curves spanning the linear response range. Sample preparation involved acid dissolution, protein precipitation with acetonitrile, and a pass‐through cleanup using Certified Sep‐Pak silica cartridges to remove coeluting interferents. Chromatographic separation was performed on an ACQUITY UPLC BEH Amide column (1.7 µm, 2.1 × 150 mm) at 35 °C, using a gradient of water/acetonitrile (10 mM ammonium formate, 0.125% formic acid) at 0.6 mL/min. Detection employed an ACQUITY QDa mass detector in single ion recording mode (m/z 127.1 for melamine, 128.0 for cyanuric acid, 85.1 for dicyandiamide) with simultaneous full-scan acquisition (m/z 50–300) for matrix monitoring.

Key Results and Discussion


Comparison of HILIC and amide chemistries demonstrated superior retention and resolution on the BEH Amide column, achieving complete separation of all three analytes in under three minutes. Mass detection offered markedly greater sensitivity than UV, enabling detection down to low µg/L levels. A recurrent matrix interference at m/z 104.1 was identified and successfully removed by the silica cartridge cleanup step. Calibration curves exhibited excellent linearity (R² > 0.996) with residuals < 20%. Recovery studies across five milk and formula matrices showed 75 – 123% recoveries, and repeatability tests on soy-based infant formula yielded retention time RSDs < 0.1% and peak area RSDs < 10%.

Benefits and Practical Applications


  • Rapid throughput with <3 min analysis time.
  • Minimal sample preparation and no need for internal standards.
  • Cost-effective integration into existing UPLC workflows.
  • High selectivity and sensitivity via SIR and full-scan MS.

Future Trends and Potential Applications


Future developments may include coupling high-resolution MS for confirmatory analysis, extending the method to additional polar adulterants, automating sample cleanup, and integrating data analytics for enhanced traceability and regulatory compliance.

Conclusion


This UPLC–QDa method offers a fast, economical, and reliable approach for screening melamine, cyanuric acid, and dicyandiamide in infant formula and milk powder. Its robustness, simplicity, and high sensitivity make it ideal for routine food safety monitoring.

References


  1. U.S. FDA Import Alert #99-29: Detention without physical examination of protein products from China due to melamine analogs, 2007.
  2. Culprit in pet food deaths may be combination of contaminants. Michigan State University, 2007.
  3. Government downplays DCD risk. News NZ, 2013.
  4. US FDA Interim Melamine and Analogues Safety/Risk Assessment, 2007.
  5. EFSA Journal 2010, 8, 1573.
  6. EFSA Journal 2004, 36, 1–6.
  7. Draher J. et al., Validation of a rapid UHPLC–MS/MS method for nitrogen-rich adulterants, J. Chromatogr. A, 1373:106–113, 2014.

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