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Performance characteristics of an ELISA screening assay for urinary synthetic cannabinoids
Author(s) -
Spinelli Eliani,
Barnes Allan J.,
Young Sheena,
Castaneto Marisol S.,
Martin Thomas M.,
Klette Kevin L.,
Huestis Marilyn A.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
drug testing and analysis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.065
H-Index - 54
eISSN - 1942-7611
pISSN - 1942-7603
DOI - 10.1002/dta.1702
Subject(s) - synthetic cannabinoids , immunoassay , chromatography , urine , cannabinoid , assay sensitivity , chemistry , medicine , antibody , immunology , biochemistry , pathology , receptor , alternative medicine
Synthetic cannabinoids are marketed as legal alternatives to cannabis, as routine urine cannabinoid immunoassays do not detect synthetic cannabinoids. Laboratories are challenged to identify these new designer drugs that are widely available and represent a major public health and safety problem. Immunoassay testing offers rapid separation of presumptive positive and negative specimens, prior to more costly and time‐consuming chromatographic confirmation. The Neogen SPICE ELISA kit targets JWH‐018 N‐pentanoic acid as a marker for urinary synthetic cannabinoids. Assay performance was evaluated by analyzing 2469 authentic urine samples with the Neogen immunoassay and liquid chromatography‐tandem mass spectrometry (LC‐MS/MS). Two immunoassay cut‐off concentrations, 5 and 10 µg/L, classified samples as presumptive positive or negative, followed by qualitative LC‐MS/MS confirmation for 29 synthetic cannabinoids markers with limits of detection of 0.5–10 µg/L to determine the assay's sensitivity, specificity and efficacy. Challenges at ±25% of each cut‐off also were investigated to determine performance around the cut‐off and intra‐ and inter‐plate imprecision. The immunoassay was linear from 1 to 250 µg/L (r 2 = 0.992) with intra‐ and inter‐plate imprecision of ≤5.3% and <9%, respectively. Sensitivity, specificity, and efficiency results with the 5 µg/L cut‐off were 79.9%, 99.7%, and 97.4% and with the 10 µg/L cut‐off 69.3%, 99.8%, and 96.3%, respectively. Cross‐reactivity was shown for 18 of 73 synthetic cannabinoids markers evaluated. Good sensitivity, specificity, and efficiency, lack of sample preparation requirements, and rapid semi‐automation documented that the Neogen SPICE ELISA kit is a viable method for screening synthetic cannabinoids in urine targeting JWH‐018 N‐pentanoic acid. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.