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Urine Drug Screening Dr. Patricia Mark November 23, 2012 Basics • Urine drug screening must always be discussed with patients ahead of time. It is part of the physician/ patient agreement which all patients on MMP sign • All patients must be treated the same way, and always with respect • UDS is not a means of punishing—rather, it is a tool to help best management Why? • To ensure that prescribers can help and support MMP patients to begin recovery and achieve stability • Provides objective evidence of compliance with the treatment plan • Are patients taking medications as prescribed? • Are patients using illicit substances? • Adjust treatment plans if necessary to work towards best outcomes for patients on opioids for opioid addiction or chronic pain. Why? • UDS is only one of several ways in which physicians can assess patients’ stability • Careful history taking • Frequent reassessment • Contact with pharmacist • Collateral information Value of self-reporting of noncompliance • Can be significantly unreliable in patients suffering from addiction disorders • If UDS is found to be discordant with history of medications: • Review medical records • Review PharmaNet • Collateral information from significant others How? • Urine specimens produced at office visits before physician encounter • Supervised collection: bags, jackets, hoodies all left outside bathroom. Patient given labelled specimen container • Urine temperature tested immediately • Specific gravity checked if indicated • Witnessed collection: seldom done, as an invasion of patient privacy; may sometimes be necessary How? • Enzyme Immunoassay (EIA) • Specific anti-drug antibody added to urine. If that drug is present, antibody binds to drug giving a measurable indicator reaction as “positive” • MMP protocol uses methadone metabolite, opioid, cocaine, benzo and methamphetamine screens How? • Gas chromatography • Mass spectroscopy • GC separates and quantifies drug components. • MS specifically identifies them. • Gold standard of urine toxicology but expensive • Each test is about $40 When? • Collected at every clinic visit — may not necessarily be tested • Random samples — collected at varying intervals every 3 or 4 months and tested • Random UDS is preferable and more valuable and should be used for all patients with methadone carries Which opioids show up in UDS? Metabolites of: • Heroin • Morphine • Codeine shows as morphine which is a metabolite of codeine • Reliably detected on regular EIA testing Heroin • Metabolizes to diacetyl morphine and then to 6-monoacetyl morphine (6-MAM) • These metabolites easily detected in standard opioid EIA testing from the 300 mg/mL level for up to 2 days after a single IV or inhaled heroin dose • 6-MAM metabolite is unique to heroin, exceptionally useful forensic tool. Detectable only up to 12 hours post-use, after which metabolizes to morphine Morphine • Presence of morphine in UDS can indicate use of heroin, morphine, codeine or poppy seeds • Urine from heroin users typically contains substantial quantities of morphine and smaller quantities of codeine reflecting poppy fluid contents • Dividing morphine levels by codeine levels yields a valuable ratio. Morphine: codeine ratio of more than 2:1 as determined by GCMS is corroborative evidence of heroin use Codeine • Nearly identical to morphine in structure • Easily detected by opioid EIA testing • Metabolizes to morphine thus placing patients at risk of being identified as abusing morphine • Morphine: codeine ratio of less than 2:1 in codeine use • Greater than 2:1 suggests morphine, heroin or poppy seed use Drugs of interest to methadone prescribers: oxycodone • Is a semi-synthetic opioid, shows up in only about 10% positive tests • There is a specific EIA for oxycodone that is reliable • Problems associated with oxycodone screening include false negatives for patients for whom oxycodone has been prescribed Drugs of interest to methadone prescribers: oxycodone • Rapid metabolizers on oxycodone may also show negative UDS as urine levels are too low • GCMS may be necessary to confirm presence or absence of oxycodone Other synthetic opioids: fentanyl • Wholly synthetic and does not react with EIA morphine antibody. Needs either a specific EIA or GCMS to confirm presence or absence. • Patients who are on fentanyl and show positive for opioids WHICH IS NOT POSSIBLE using standard tests are abusing other opioids which react with the standard EIA testing. Methadone • Is a wholly synthetic opioid which does not show up on standard testing. Needs a specific EIA for methadone metabolites which is virtually 100% sensitive. • All UDS kits, whether point-of-care testing or in labs, use the specific EIA for methadone metabolites to eliminate possibility of adulteration with methadone. Hydromorphone • Is a semi-synthetic opioid which may or may not show up on routine UDS with standard opioid EIA testing but more likely to show up if very high dosing • Will require GCMS or specific EIA to confirm presence or absence Buprenorphine • Is a semi-synthetic morphine-based molecule which has been so altered that does not show up on standard opioid EIA testing • Specific and highly reliable EIA tests available in labs and in point-of-care test kits Other confounding variables • Poppy seed from the opium poppy Papaver Somniferum contains small amounts of morphine and codeine • Baked goods with poppy seeds are widely available • Consumption of one poppy seed Danish streusel pastry can easily produce positive opioid EIA tests • Positive UDS can last for 24 hours Poppy seeds • Morphine:codeine ratio in poppy seed ingestion is also 2:1 or greater, consistent with opium poppy fluid as the opiate source of heroin and poppy seeds • Difficult to determine whether opioid-positive EIA is due to poppy seed or heroin use • High levels of morphine more likely to be heroin but may be misleading • Advise patients to avoid baked goods with poppy seeds Fluoroquinolones • Can also produce positive-opioid EIAs • Is correlated to peak levels. In one study, urine collected at 6–8 hours after fluoroquinolone ingestion was 100% (false) positive for opioids • Essentially unknown why fluoroquinolones have this effect • If a true false positive, GCMS will demonstrate no opioid present Benzodiazepines • Always monitored by UDS, as are contraindicated for patients on the MMP • EIA for benzos is based on the diazepam antibody • Shows reliably positive test for diazepam and alprazolam • Most diazepam EIAs do not detect clonazepam or lorazepam • GCMS is needed to identify both these benzos Urine detection time frame • Methadone 4–5 days • Opioids 2–3 days • Cocaine/metabolites 2–4 days • Benzodiazepines 1–42 days • THC single use 2–3 days • THC habitual use up to 12 weeks • Methamphetamine 3–5 days • Alcohol 6–24 hours Other exceptions • Z drugs – zopiclone and zaleplon are not detected in spite of the fact that they metabolize down to benzos • Chloral hydrate not detected—seldom now prescribed except on occasions in hospital Sertraline • Patients on sertaline may produce intermittent false positive benzo EIA specimens • Due to a metabolite of sertraline • Chemical structure of sertraline and its metabolite bear a striking resemblance to diazepam which is the likely cause of false positive reactions • GCMS needed, if necessary, to determine the presence of absence of specific benzos UDS interpretation • What shows in UDS is important • What doesn’t show in UDS is equally important: • Methadone metabolites • Benzos • Synthetic and semi-synthetic opioids Limitations of UDS • Assesses the presence or absence of a particular drug and/or metabolite at a specific threshold of concentration at a specific time • Unexpected result does not diagnose • Abuse or addiction • Physical dependence • Diversion • Does not provide accurate information on • Time of last use • Amount and frequency of use Potential harms of UDS • Incorrect interpretation of UDS could result in: • Unwarranted discontinuation of opioids • Damage to physician/patient relationship • If very unexpected result, especially with POC testing, always get laboratory confirmation • Potential for false reassurance • Adulteration/cheating • Alteration of behaviour in anticipation of UDS, hence need for random UDS Consequences of “dirty” urine drug screens • Always review results of UDS with patient • UDS result one of many factors taken into account when making clinical decisions • Review physician/patient agreement • Review treatment plan • Increase frequency of office visits • Methadone dose if opioid-positive: is it appropriate? • May have to discontinue carries in the face of instability • Increase counselling and other support services Conclusion • Urine drug screening is an important part of the comprehensive care of patients who are on MMP or are receiving opioids for chronic pain and must be undertaken in a respectful, nonjudgmental manner • Should be considered as an objective test within the greater biopsychosocial context • Should always be interpreted in the context of broad based clinical care of the individual patient Reference: Tenore PL. Advanced urine toxicology testing. Journal of Addictive Diseases. 2010 Oct; 29(4):436–48. THANK YOU