Literature DB >> 22004671

Oral fluid drug testing of chronic pain patients. I. Positive prevalence rates of licit and illicit drugs.

Rebecca Heltsley1, Anne DePriest, David L Black, Tim Robert, Lucas Marshall, Viola M Meadors, Yale H Caplan, Edward J Cone.   

Abstract

Oral fluid compliance monitoring of chronic pain patients is an analytical challenge because of the limited specimen volume and the number of drugs that require detection. This study evaluated oral fluid for monitoring pain patients and compared results to urine studies of similar populations. Oral fluid specimens were analyzed from 6441 pain patients from 231 pain clinics in 20 states. Specimens were screened with 14 ELISA assays and non-negative specimens were confirmed by LC-MS-MS for 40 licit and illicit drugs and metabolites. There was an 83.9% positive screening rate (n=5401) of which 98.7% (n=5329) were confirmed at ≥ LOQ concentrations for at least one analyte. The prevalence of confirmed positive drug groups was as follows: opiates > oxycodone > benzodiazepines > methadone ≈ carisoprodol > fentanyl > cannabinoidstramadol > cocaine > amphetaminespropoxyphenebuprenorphine > barbiturates > methamphetamine. Approximately 11.5% of the study population of pain patients apparently used one or more illicit drugs (cannabis, cocaine, methamphetamine and/or MDMA). Overall, the pattern of licit and illicit drugs and metabolites observed in oral fluid paralleled results reported earlier for urine, indicating that oral fluid is a viable option for use in compliance monitoring programs of chronic pain patients.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 22004671     DOI: 10.1093/anatox/35.8.529

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Anal Toxicol        ISSN: 0146-4760            Impact factor:   3.367


  11 in total

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Review 4.  Current knowledge on cannabinoids in oral fluid.

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9.  A Novel Chronic Opioid Monitoring Tool to Assess Prescription Drug Steady State Levels in Oral Fluid.

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