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Solid-Phase Extraction of 11-Nor-Δ9-Tetrahydrocannabinol-9-Carboxylic Acid from Urine Drug-Testing Specimens with the Cerex PolyCrom-THC™ Column
Author(s) -
David K. Crockett,
Gordon J. Nelson,
Philip Dimson,
Francis M. Urry
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
journal of analytical toxicology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.161
H-Index - 76
eISSN - 1945-2403
pISSN - 0146-4760
DOI - 10.1093/jat/24.4.245
Subject(s) - chromatography , chemistry , derivatization , solid phase extraction , extraction (chemistry) , urine , liquid–liquid extraction , sample preparation , selected ion monitoring , gas chromatography , gas chromatography–mass spectrometry , high performance liquid chromatography , mass spectrometry , biochemistry
Confirmation of drugs of abuse by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) is the most time-consuming process used by drug-testing laboratories. Cost effectiveness and competitive turnaround times for testing results demand fast, efficient, and reliable extraction methods. We applied the Cerex Polycrom-THC solid-phase extraction (SPE) column to the extraction of 11-nor-delta9-tetrahydrocannabinol carboxylic acid (9-THCA) from urine. This column uses an anion exchange divinyl-benzene copolymer, which requires no pH adjustment after hydrolysis of the THC-glucuronide with base, as is necessary with many other SPE columns. With urine, no preconditioning of the SPE column was necessary. After extraction, trimethylsilation derivatization was performed with N-methyl-N-(trimethylsilyl) trifluoroacetamide. This further improved efficiency because no heated incubation was required. A method correlation to an existing liquid-liquid extraction was performed. Analysis was on a Finnigan Voyager GC-MS with a 2.5-min run time per injection. Using 9-THCA-d9 deuterated internal standard, the assay was linear from 2 to 2000 ng/mL. Total precision at the 15-ng/mL cutoff concentration was 4.4%. The Cerex column was also evaluated for interference using two common drug-test adulterants, Klear and Urine Luck. Considerably less interference was observed when compared to an existing liquid-liquid method.

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