Iron Supplement Testing: ICP-MS Potency, Form Verification, Disint
Iron is one of the most commonly supplemented minerals worldwide, but iron supplement testing presents challenges that go beyond simple elemental analysis. Lab testing for iron supplements must quantify total iron content by ICP-MS, verify the specific iron form claimed on the label (ferrous sulfate, ferrous bisglycinate, ferric citrate, carbonyl iron, etc.), assess disintegration of tablets that are critical for nutrient release, and screen for heavy metal contaminants that can accompany mineral sources. Without proper form verification, a product labeled as a gentle, chelated iron bisglycinate could actually be a less bioavailable and more stomach-irritating ferrous sulfate.
Iron testing is further complicated by the fact that different iron forms contain different percentages of elemental iron. Ferrous sulfate heptahydrate is approximately 20% elemental iron by weight, while ferrous bisglycinate may be 20-25% elemental iron, and carbonyl iron can be 98% or more. The labeled amount on a supplement facts panel typically refers to elemental iron, and the lab result must confirm that the product delivers the claimed amount. This article explains the analytical approach and what to ask your lab.
Elemental Iron Potency by ICP-MS
Total iron content is measured by ICP-MS or ICP-OES (inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectroscopy) after acid digestion of the sample. This method measures all iron present, regardless of form or oxidation state. The result is reported as mass of iron per serving (or per tablet/capsule) and compared against the label claim.
For a product labeled as "Iron (as ferrous bisglycinate) 25 mg," the lab result should show approximately 25 mg of elemental iron per serving, within typical overage tolerances. Because minerals like iron are stable and do not degrade like vitamins, overages are typically small (0-5%) and mainly account for manufacturing variation rather than shelf-life loss.
The ICP-MS or ICP-OES result does not distinguish between iron forms -- it tells you how much elemental iron is present, but not whether it came from ferrous sulfate, ferrous bisglycinate, or another source. For form verification, additional testing is needed.
⚠️ Note
Elemental iron content is what matters for label claims, but it does not tell you the iron form. A product could pass elemental iron testing but fail form verification. Both tests are needed when the label specifies a particular iron form, especially when that form implies bioavailability or tolerability advantages.
Iron Form Verification
Verifying the iron form is analytically more challenging than measuring total iron because it requires distinguishing between iron compounds that may have different solubility, oxidation states, or counter-ions. Several approaches can be used depending on the forms in question.
Ferrous (Fe2+) vs. ferric (Fe3+) iron can be distinguished by redox titration or spectrophotometric methods using iron-specific chelators like 1,10-phenanthroline or ferrozine that react selectively with Fe2+. Ferric iron must first be reduced to Fe2+ for detection, so the difference between total iron and directly measured Fe2+ indicates Fe3+ content. This is important because ferrous iron (Fe2+) is more bioavailable than ferric iron (Fe3+), and products labeled as ferrous should contain predominantly Fe2+.
For distinguishing different ferrous salts (sulfate vs. bisglycinate vs. fumarate), counter-ion analysis can be informative. Sulfate can be measured by ion chromatography, and a product containing ferrous sulfate should show a sulfate:iron molar ratio of approximately 1:1. Chelated iron forms like ferrous bisglycinate contain amino acid ligands, which can be detected by amino acid analysis after hydrolysis. However, definitive form identification may require a combination of analytical techniques plus documentation from the ingredient supplier.
X-ray diffraction (XRD) can identify crystalline iron compounds in raw materials but is less useful for finished products where the iron is dispersed in a matrix with many other crystalline and amorphous components.
Disintegration Testing
Disintegration testing is particularly important for iron tablets because iron is absorbed primarily in the duodenum and upper small intestine. A tablet that does not disintegrate within the stomach transit time may pass the absorption window without releasing its iron content, effectively making the iron unavailable even though the tablet contains the correct amount.
USP <2040> disintegration testing for dietary supplements specifies that uncoated tablets should disintegrate within 30 minutes in simulated gastric fluid (or water) at 37 degrees Celsius. Enteric-coated iron tablets are designed to pass through the stomach intact and disintegrate in the intestinal environment -- these require a two-stage disintegration test (acid stage followed by buffer stage at pH 6.8).
Iron tablets, particularly those with high elemental iron content, can be dense and hard. Excipient choices and tablet compression force significantly affect disintegration time. If your iron tablets consistently fail disintegration testing, work with your manufacturer to adjust the formulation or compression parameters.
Heavy Metal Contaminants
Mineral supplements, including iron, can carry heavy metal contaminants from the raw mineral source. Iron compounds derived from mining or chemical synthesis may contain lead, arsenic, cadmium, and mercury that must be controlled to safe levels. ICP-MS testing for the USP <2232> elemental impurity panel should be performed on iron raw materials and finished products.
The allowable heavy metal limits depend on the daily dose. Iron supplements typically contain 18-65 mg elemental iron per day, which is a relatively small mass, making the per-gram limits less stringent than for high-dose botanicals. However, iron is often taken daily for extended periods, so cumulative exposure should be considered.
Prop 65 limits in California for lead (0.5 mcg/day MADL) are particularly relevant for iron supplements. Because the daily iron dose is small, the lead concentration per gram can be relatively high before approaching the Prop 65 limit, but testing is still needed to confirm compliance.
Quick Reference
Lab Category Matching
| Testing Need | Lab Requirement |
|---|---|
| Elemental iron content | ICP-MS or ICP-OES after acid digestion |
| Fe2+ vs. Fe3+ speciation | Spectrophotometric (ferrozine/phenanthroline) |
| Sulfate counter-ion | Ion chromatography |
| Heavy metal contaminants | ICP-MS, USP <2232> |
| Disintegration | USP <2040>, simulated gastric fluid |
| Amino acid chelate verification | Amino acid analysis after hydrolysis |
Real Methods Explained
| Method | What It Tests | Detection Limit | Cost per Sample |
|---|---|---|---|
| ICP-MS | Total elemental iron | 0.01 ppm in solution | $100-$200 |
| UV-Vis (Ferrozine) | Fe2+ vs. total Fe | ~0.1 mg/L | $100-$150 |
| Ion Chromatography | Sulfate, other anions | 0.1-1 ppm | $100-$150 |
| XRD | Crystalline phase identity | >1-5% in mixture | $200-$400 |
| Disintegration Apparatus | Tablet breakup time | Timed observation | $50-$100 |
What Sample to Send
For iron tablets: 20-30 tablets. For raw iron compound powder: 10-15 grams. For liquid iron supplements: 50-100 mL in the original container. Iron samples are stable at room temperature and do not typically require special handling, but liquid formulations should be well-mixed before sampling. If the iron is chelated (bisglycinate, glycinate), inform the lab so they can use digestion methods appropriate for metal-amino acid complexes.
Expected Turnaround Time
| Testing | Typical TAT |
|---|---|
| Elemental iron (ICP-MS) | 5-7 business days |
| Fe2+/Fe3+ speciation | 5-7 business days |
| Heavy metals panel | 5-7 business days |
| Disintegration testing | 5-7 business days |
| Combined package | 7-10 business days |
Price Ranges
| Testing | Typical Price Range |
|---|---|
| Elemental iron by ICP-MS | $100-$200 |
| Fe2+/Fe3+ speciation | $100-$150 |
| Full heavy metals panel | $100-$200 |
| Disintegration | $50-$100 |
| Complete iron supplement package | $350-$600 |
Country/Region Targeting
Iron supplements are regulated differently across markets. In the US, iron is an essential mineral allowed in dietary supplements with labeling requirements under 21 CFR 111. The EU has established both minimum and maximum levels for iron in food supplements. Canada's NHPD specifies permitted iron forms and dose ranges. Some countries classify iron supplements at higher doses as medicines rather than dietary supplements, which changes the testing and regulatory pathway. Brands selling iron supplements internationally should confirm the permitted iron forms and dose ranges in each target market.
FAQ
Q: How do I verify that my iron supplement contains the claimed iron form (e.g., ferrous bisglycinate vs. ferrous sulfate)?
Form verification typically requires multiple analytical approaches. For ferrous bisglycinate, amino acid analysis can confirm the presence of glycine in the expected ratio to iron. For ferrous sulfate, ion chromatography can confirm sulfate presence. Fe2+/Fe3+ speciation confirms the oxidation state. No single test provides complete form identification, so combine elemental analysis with counter-ion and ligand testing. Supplier documentation and identity testing of the incoming raw material also support form verification.
Q: What elemental iron percentage should a ferrous sulfate supplement contain?
Ferrous sulfate is available in several hydrate forms. Ferrous sulfate heptahydrate (FeSO4-7H2O) contains approximately 20% elemental iron by weight. Ferrous sulfate dried (FeSO4-xH2O, partially dehydrated) contains approximately 30-33% elemental iron. Your formulation should account for the specific hydrate form used when calculating the amount of raw material needed to deliver the labeled elemental iron dose.
Q: Why does my iron tablet need disintegration testing?
Iron absorption occurs primarily in the upper small intestine, and a tablet must disintegrate in the stomach or very early in the intestinal tract to make iron available for absorption. A tablet that remains intact through the stomach may pass the absorption window, rendering its iron content unavailable. Disintegration and dissolution testing is especially important for iron, calcium, and other minerals where absorption site and dissolution rate matter.
Q: Do liquid iron supplements need the same testing as tablets?
Liquid iron supplements require elemental iron quantification by ICP-MS and heavy metal testing, but disintegration testing does not apply. Instead, liquid products should be tested for pH, fill volume, and, if preserved, preservative efficacy. Microbial testing is more important for liquids than dry tablets because the water content supports microbial growth. Also test for precipitation or sedimentation over shelf life, as iron can form insoluble complexes in some liquid formulations.
Q: Can I test iron and heavy metals in a single ICP-MS run?
Yes. A single ICP-MS analysis can quantify iron along with lead, arsenic, cadmium, mercury, and other trace elements simultaneously. This is one of the advantages of ICP-MS -- a single sample digest yields data for both the active mineral and potential contaminants. Confirm with your lab that their ICP-MS method includes iron in the analyte list (iron is a major element that may require different dilution than trace elements).
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