Structures drug screen interpretation with confirmation testing and clinical correlation. Use when interpreting drug screens, managing confirmatory testing, or documenting toxicology results.
Structures drug screen interpretation with confirmation testing and clinical correlation.
Toxicology testing spans clinical emergency management, workplace drug testing, forensic investigation, pain management compliance, and therapeutic drug monitoring. The interpretation of drug screens is fraught with pitfalls: immunoassay cross-reactivity produces false positives (dextromethorphan triggering PCP assays, sertraline triggering benzodiazepine assays), and limited assay panels create false negatives (standard opiate screens do not detect fentanyl, oxycodone, or methadone). Misinterpretation of toxicology results can lead to unjust employment termination, inappropriate psychiatric holds, missed poisoning diagnoses, or opioid prescription violations.
SAMHSA (Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration) Mandatory Guidelines govern federal workplace drug testing programs, requiring specific cutoff concentrations and a Medical Review Officer (MRO) process. CAP accreditation (Toxicology/TDM TOX checklist) requires validated cutoff concentrations, documented confirmation procedures, and quality control per CLIA standards. Forensic toxicology follows SWGTOX (Scientific Working Group for Forensic Toxicology) and SOFT/AAFS guidelines for chain of custody and reporting. This skill ensures systematic and defensible toxicology interpretation across all settings.
Interpret the initial screen recognizing the inherent limitations of immunoassay:
| Drug Class | SAMHSA Screen Cutoff | SAMHSA Confirm Cutoff | Common Cross-Reactants/Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Amphetamines | 500 ng/mL | 250 ng/mL (d-amp/meth) | Pseudoephedrine, bupropion, labetalol, ranitidine, phentermine |
| Barbiturates | (clinical only) | Analyte-specific | Phenobarbital immunoassay may not detect short-acting barbiturates |
| Benzodiazepines | (clinical only) | Analyte-specific | Sertraline, efavirenz; oxazepam-based assays miss clonazepam, lorazepam at low levels |
| Cocaine metabolite (BZE) | 150 ng/mL | 100 ng/mL | Very few cross-reactants; high specificity |
| Marijuana (THC-COOH) | 50 ng/mL | 15 ng/mL | CBD products may contain trace THC; hemp exposure unlikely to exceed 50 ng/mL |
| Opiates | 2000 ng/mL | 2000 ng/mL (codeine/morphine) | Standard assay detects morphine, codeine; does NOT reliably detect oxycodone, fentanyl, methadone, buprenorphine |
| PCP | 25 ng/mL | 25 ng/mL | Dextromethorphan, ketamine, diphenhydramine, venlafaxine |
| MDMA | 500 ng/mL | 250 ng/mL | Cross-reactivity with MDA, MDEA |
| What the Standard Screen MISSES | Required Separate Assay |
|---|---|
| Fentanyl and fentanyl analogues | Fentanyl-specific immunoassay or LC-MS/MS |
| Oxycodone/oxymorphone | Oxycodone-specific immunoassay or LC-MS/MS |
| Methadone | Methadone-specific immunoassay |
| Buprenorphine | Buprenorphine-specific immunoassay |
| Gabapentin/pregabalin | LC-MS/MS only |
| Synthetic cannabinoids (K2/Spice) | Specific panel (LC-MS/MS) |
| Designer stimulants (bath salts) | Specific panel (LC-MS/MS) |
| GHB | GHB-specific assay |
For all presumptive positive screens, confirmatory testing by a different analytical principle is required:
Confirmation methods:
Confirmation interpretation rules:
Interpret confirmed results in the context of clinical presentation and pharmacokinetics:
Detection windows (urine, approximate):
| Substance | Detection After Single Use | Detection After Chronic Use |
|---|---|---|
| Amphetamine/methamphetamine | 1-3 days | 3-7 days |
| Cocaine (benzoylecgonine) | 2-4 days | Up to 14 days (heavy use) |
| Marijuana (THC-COOH) | 3-5 days (single) | Up to 30+ days (chronic, heavy) |
| Opiates (morphine, codeine) | 1-3 days | 3-5 days |
| Fentanyl | 1-3 days | 3-7 days |
| Benzodiazepines (short-acting) | 1-3 days | 5-7 days |
| Benzodiazepines (long-acting) | 5-7 days | Up to 30 days |
| PCP | 3-7 days | Up to 30 days |
| Methadone | 2-4 days | Up to 14 days |
| Buprenorphine | 2-6 days | Up to 11 days |
Metabolic relationships critical for interpretation:
Tailor the report and interpretation to the testing context:
Structure the toxicology interpretation: