Abstract

Urinary ethyl glucuronide (EtG), an alcohol biomarker, plays an essential role in monitoring alcohol abstinence and relapse during treatment for alcohol dependence. Detection of this biomarker has become a routine in many clinical and forensic laboratories over the last few years. Most previously published methods commonly use hyphenated chromatographic techniques along with extensive extraction procedure before analysis. This work aimed to develop and validate an electron impact ionization mode gas chromatography–mass spectrometry method to measure ethyl glucuronide levels in human urine. For its determination, urine samples were dried under a gentle stream of nitrogen, derivatized with N,O-bis(trimethylsilyl) trifluoroacetamide, incubated, and injected into the instrument. The analysis was performed using single quadrupole gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC-MS) technology and validation was performed according to the guidelines of the German Society of Toxicology and Forensic Chemistry (GTFCh). The linearity of urinary EtG was obtained in the range of 30–5000 ng/ml with a correlation coefficient (r) above 0.999. The extraction recoveries exceeded 80%, and the obtained inter-day and intra-day precisions were below 15%. The achieved limit of detection was 10 ng/ml and limit of quantification achieved was 30 ng/ml. The electron ionization gas chromatography–mass spectrometry technique proves to be a feasible option for determining EtG in human urine when other sophisticated techniques are unapproachable. This method provides a good sensitivity and proves to be cost-effective, robust, and advantageous for both clinical as well as forensic settings.

Highlights

  • Ethyl glucuronide (EtG) is a non-volatile, water-soluble, and stable direct metabolite of ethanol (Wurst et al 2003)

  • Only a small fraction (0.02–0.06%) of the total ethanol eliminated is bio transformed to EtG which can be detected in body fluids as well as hair (Crunelle et al 2014; Washlam et al 2012)

  • Gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC-MS) is a versatile technique that can measure a broad spectrum of primary water-soluble metabolites (Halket et al 2005)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Ethyl glucuronide (EtG) is a non-volatile, water-soluble, and stable direct metabolite of ethanol (Wurst et al 2003). Various extraction procedures such as liquid–liquid extraction, solid-phase extraction (SPE), or solid-phase microextraction (Acikkol et al 2015; Favretto et al 2010; Freire et al 2008; Janda and Alt 2001) have been employed for the detection of EtG to reduce matrix interference and improve detection. Such extraction methods are cumbersome, timeconsuming, and expensive; they have marginal extraction efficiency and require large amounts of organic solvents (Sharma et al 2015). Single quadrupole GC increases the stability of the metabolites and is cost-effective and robust (Halket et al 2005)

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call