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. 2023 May 9;58(3):274-279.
doi: 10.1093/alcalc/agad009.

Urine Drug Tests Indicate Higher Prevalence of Combined Alcohol and Cocaine Use Compared to Alcohol Together with Cannabis or Amphetamine-A Possible Link to Cocaethylene

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Urine Drug Tests Indicate Higher Prevalence of Combined Alcohol and Cocaine Use Compared to Alcohol Together with Cannabis or Amphetamine-A Possible Link to Cocaethylene

Anders Helander et al. Alcohol Alcohol. .

Abstract

Aim: This retrospective study examined the prevalence of combined ethanol and cocaine use, which produces an enhanced psychoactive effect through formation of the active metabolite cocaethylene, compared to combined use of ethanol and two other common recreational drugs, cannabis and amphetamine, based on urine drug test results.

Methods: The study was based on >30,000 consecutive samples from routine urine drug testing in 2020, and 2627 samples from acute poisonings in the STRIDA project (2010-2016), in Sweden. Drug testing for ethanol (i.e. ethyl glucuronide and ethyl sulfate), cocaine (benzoylecgonine), cannabis (Δ9-THC-COOH) and amphetamine was done by routine immunoassay screening and LC-MS/MS confirmatory methods. Seven samples testing positive for cocaine and ethyl glucuronide were also analyzed for cocaethylene by LC-HRMS/MS.

Results: Among routine samples for which testing of ethanol and cocaine had been requested, 43% tested positive for both substances, compared with 24% for ethanol and cannabis and 19% for ethanol and amphetamine (P < 0.0001). Among the drug-related intoxications, 60% of cocaine-positive samples were also positive for ethanol, compared to 40% for cannabis and ethanol and 37% for amphetamine and ethanol. Cocaethylene was detected (range 1.3-150 μg/L) in all randomly selected samples testing positive for ethanol and cocaine use.

Conclusions: These results, which were based on objective laboratory measures, indicated that combined ethanol and cocaine exposure was more prevalent than expected from drug use statistics. This may relate both to the common use of these substances in party and nightlife settings, and the amplified and prolonged pharmacological effect by the active metabolite cocaethylene.

Keywords: Ethanol; amphetamine; cannabis; cocaethylene; cocaine; urine drug test.

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Conflict of interest statement

None.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Cocaine is hydrolyzed by liver carboxylesterases to the inactive metabolite benzoylecgonine. In the presence of ethanol, cocaine and ethanol combine by a transesterification reaction to the active metabolite cocaethylene, which is equally potent as cocaine and has a longer elimination half-life.
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
Relative proportions of urine samples from routine drug tests that were examined, and found to be positive, for combined exposure to ethanol (i.e. ethyl glucuronide (EtG) and ethyl sulfate (EtS)) and cocaine (i.e. benzoylecgonine), or ethanol and cannabis (i.e. Δ9-THC-COOH), or ethanol and amphetamine. The prevalence for combined cocaine and ethanol exposure was significantly higher (P < 0.0001) compared to the other two drug combinations.
Fig. 3
Fig. 3
Chromatograms and mass spectra from LC–HRMS/MS analysis of cocaethylene in urine in full scan–extracted ion chromatogram mode. Results are shown for (A) a calibrator, prepared by spiking blank urine with a certified reference material, and two selected patient samples containing (B) a high and (C) a low cocaethylene level. The HRMS instrument was operated in positive mode and three ion transitions were used to confirm peak identity of cocaethylene (m/z 318.16998 > 196.13306 (quantifier), 82.06584 and 150.09179 (qualifiers)).

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