Monitoring urinary excretion of cannabinoids by fluorescence-polarization immunoassay: A cannabinoid-to-creatinine ratio study

Albert D. Fraser, David Worth

Résultat de recherche: Articleexamen par les pairs

17 Citations (Scopus)

Résumé

Drug testing in substance abuse treatment programs is focused on urine analysis of parent drugs and major metabolites. Huestis reported that serial monitoring of the major urinary cannabinoid metabolite (Δ9 -THC-COOH)-to-creatinine ratios in paired urine specimens (collected at least 24 hours apart) could differentiate new marijuana or hashish use from residual cannabinoid metabolite excretion in urine after previous drug use. Subjects with a history of chronic marijuana use were screened for cannabinoids in urine over several months by an enzyme immunoassay (EMIT) with a cut-off value of 50 ng/mL. Presumptive positive specimens were confirmed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) for Δ9-THC-COOH with a cut-off value of 15 ng/mL. The objective of this study was to determine whether a semiquantitative cannabinoids immunoassay (corrected for creatinine concentration) could differentiate new marijuana use from residual cannabinoid excretion in chronic users of marijuana or hashish compared with GC-MS. The criterion for new marijuana use was a cannabinoid-to-creatinine ratio ≥0.5 (dividing the immunoassay quantitative result to creatinine ratio of specimen 2 by the specimen 1 ratio, specimen 3 by the specimen 2 ratio, etc.). Urine specimens were analyzed by fluorescence-polarization immunoassay (FPIA) on an Abbott TDxFLx analyzer after analysis by GC-MS. In 90 urine specimens (group A) with Δ9-THC-COOH values determined by GC-MS, the mean Δ9-THC-COOH concentration was 44.4 ng/mL (range, 16-100), and the mean FPIA total cannabinoids value was 91.7 ng/mL (range, 21-204 ng/mL) with a correlation coefficient of 0.993 (group A), In 111 specimens (group B), the mean Δ9-THC-COOH concentration was 361 ng/mL (range, 101-960 ng/mL). The mean FPIA value was 657 ng/mL (range, 211-1,270 ng/mL), and the correlation coefficient of the B series was 0,975, Percent cross-reactivity for Δ9-THC-COOH standards prepared in drug-free urine by FPIA was 82% at 25 ng/mL, 45% at 50 ng/mL, and 50% at 100 ng/mL. Overall, there was 89% agreement (132 of 148 specimens) between FPIA and GC-MS. In 16 of 148 specimens, however, the FPIA and GC-MS paired urine data did not agree, The sensitivity of the FPIA assay was 95.3%, and the specificity was 44.4%. The authors conclude that FPIA cannabinoid analysis should be further evaluated as an alternative to GC-MS quantitation to help distinguish new marijuana use from residual marijuana metabolite excretion in clinical drug treatment programs.

Langue d'origineEnglish
Pages (de-à)746-750
Nombre de pages5
JournalTherapeutic Drug Monitoring
Volume24
Numéro de publication6
DOI
Statut de publicationPublished - déc. 2002

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • Pharmacology
  • Pharmacology (medical)

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