- PT is used to represent the results of testing of tobacco products. Examples of the types of testing that would be represented here include, but are not limited to:
- Testing products for conformance to design parameter specifications
- Testing for harmful and potentially harmful constituents (HPHCs) in samples of the product.
- Product stability study results
- PTCAT (Category of Test) is a required variable since the same analyte (same value of PTEST) may appear in more than one context PTCAT will differentiate the records in these cases (e.g., HPHC TESTING, STABILITY STUDY)
- PTSCAT can be used to further differentiate constituents
- Constituents like "tar" which are not formally designated HPHC but that are tested along with designated HPHCs should be categorized as "HPHC TESTING" with PTSCAT="OTHER".
- The original result of a test and its associated units are represented in PTORRES and PTORRESU, respectively. If the result is standardized to a different set of units, the standardized value and its units are represented in PTSRESC and PTSTRESU. Additionally, PTSRESN should be populated if the standard result is numeric.
- PTORRES, PTSTRESC and PTSTRESN are all excepted variables. PTSTRESN can be left null if the result is not numeric
- If the original results are not standardized to different units, the value in PTORRES should be carried over to PTSTRESC and PTSRESN (if numeric). The value in PTORRESU should be carried over into PTSTRESC.
- The variable PTSPEC (Specimen Type) is used to represent the specimen matrix (e.g, E-LIQUID, TOBACCO, SMOKE, VAPOR
- PTSPCCND (Specimen Condition) is used for conditions such as "AS-IS" or "DRIED".
- When lab methodology is too complex for the single PTMETHOD variable, PTXFN should be used to reference a file name or path to a file in the application that describes the methodology used.
Overview
Content Tools