(Clinical Chemistry. 1998;44:790-799.)
© 1998 American Association for Clinical Chemistry, Inc.
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Drug Monitoring and Toxicology |
Analytical approaches of European Union laboratories to drugs of abuse analysis
Roser Badia,
Rafael de la Torrea,
Sergio Corcione,
and Jordi Segura
a Author for correspondence. Fax 34-3-2213237; e-mail rtorre{at}imim.es.
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Abstract
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We report a survey on urine drug testing within a total of 269
laboratories of the European Union. Clinical laboratories predominated
over forensic laboratories (59.5% vs 28.5%). Screening without
identification/quantification was the common approach used by clinical
laboratories, whereas screening with identification/quantification was
the approach used by almost all forensic laboratories. Screening was
primarily performed by immunoassay in both types of laboratories. Gas
chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry was the main analytical
method used for specific identification/quantification of drugs, but
other methods (including immunoassays) were also used. Cutoff values
applied varied by laboratory type, country, and method used. A high
percentage of laboratories did not use or report cutoff values.
Overall, countries of the European Union vary significantly in regards
to drugs tested, analytical approach, and screening and identification
cutoff values. It is recommended to clearly state the analytical method
and the cutoff values used when reporting results for drugs of abuse
testing.
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Introduction
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Countries in the European Union
(EU)1
differ in their approaches to the drugs of abuse problem;
consequently, there are differences concerning drugs of abuse testing.
The development of an internal single market in the EU and the
associated free exchange of laboratory services bring new relevance to
intercomparison of data. Since 1993, free circulation of workers in the
EU has added a further need for harmonized criteria in workplace drug
testing.
The analytical strategy used for drug testing may depend to a great
extent to potential consequences of results. In general terms, analysis
of body fluids for drugs of abuse takes place in two different
environments: the clinical setting (therapeutic care of drug addicts)
and the penalty setting (e.g., forensic medicine, prisons, workplace,
insurance, driving, sports). In clinical practice, the analytical
result is only one of a series of factors that affect the
decision-making process and must be assessed as a complement to the
patientphysician relationship. By contrast, in the penalty model,
sanctions against the individual providing the specimen are mostly
based on analytical results; the reliability of these results,
therefore, is essential.
Important aspects of urine drug testing include the analytical
approach, the methods used, and the cutoff concentrations applied.
Usually a two-step procedure is followed in drugs of abuse testing,
i.e., a preliminary screening of groups of substances (e.g., opiates),
and the identification of specific substances (e.g., morphine, codeine,
6-acetylmorphine), sometimes accompanied by their quantification.
However, given the lack of specific guidelines, different analytical
strategies may be considered acceptable by different EU analysts.
In this context, in 1993 and 1994 a survey was undertaken in the
European Community to examine the reliability of urine drug testing.
The survey was supported both by the DG V/F/1 (Directorate General V,
Employment, Industrial Relations and Social Affairs, Public Health and
Safety at Work) of the European Commission and by the Institut
Municipal d'Investigació Mèdica, Barcelona, Spain. The
purpose of the study was not only to assess the quality of analysis
performed (1), but also to gain insight into the analytical
strategies applied in the different European countries and laboratories
involved in drugs of abuse testing.
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Materials and Methods
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In the 1993 and 1994 survey among laboratories of the EU member
states performing drugs of abuse analyses, six test samples of sterile
urine containing several drugs and (or) their metabolites were provided
for analysis under routine conditions. The drug menu by class of
substances included amphetamines, opiates (morphine-related compounds),
methadone, cocaine, and cannabinoids, whereas the drug menu for
identification/quantification consisted of amphetamine,
methamphetamine, morphine, codeine, 6-acetylmorphine, methadone,
1,5-dimethyl-3,3-diphenyl-2-ethylidene-pyrrolidine (EDDP),
benzoylecgonine, ecgonine methyl ester, and
11-nor-9-carboxy-
-tetrahydrocannabinol. The
content of samples was validated by a group of seven reference
laboratories.
The results collection form required participating laboratories to
provide information regarding type of laboratory (forensic, clinical,
research, other) and type of institution (commercial or noncommercial).
Information regarding the analytical methods used at each step (drug
screening, identification, and quantification) was requested. A coded
list of analytical methods most often used in drug testing was
provided. Moreover, the form for results reporting was designed in such
a way as to gain insight into analytical cutoff concentrations used
both at screening and identification procedures.
More than 300 centers from a list supplied by the European Commission
were invited to participate in the study. The list was based on a
questionnaire on performances and capabilities of European Analytical
Toxicology Labs. (2).
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Results and Discussion
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participating laboratories
The total number of participating laboratories was 269 (including
the seven reference laboratories), of which 32 (12.5%) were commercial
laboratories and 225 (87.5%) were noncommercial, depending on whether
organizations declared that they were profit- or
non-profit-oriented. Data from five laboratories were not
available. Laboratories from all countries belonged mainly to
noncommercial institutions. With regard to the type of centers, 59.5%
were clinical laboratories (range 3187%), 28.5% were forensic
laboratories (range 561%), and 12% were "other" (range
640%), including research laboratories (5%) (Table 1
).
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Table 1. Number (and percentages) of clinical and forensic
laboratories per country and number of commercial and noncommercial
laboratories.
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analytical approaches
A comparison of the rate of each analytical approach performed by
laboratories, depending on whether they were clinical or forensic, is
shown in Fig. 1
. In general, a high percentage of clinical laboratories
performed only screening tests without identification or confirmation
of positive urine drug test screen results; however, the analytical
approach of clinical laboratories was not homogeneous in all countries
(Table 2
). For example, the percentages of Spanish and Portuguese
clinical laboratories participating exclusively in the screening phase
of the survey were clearly above the mean (71% and 100%,
respectively). In contrast, all Danish clinical laboratories performed
at least one identification of specific substances. However, none of
the clinical laboratories from Denmark or Portugal performed
quantification of substances, whereas >30% of laboratories from The
Netherlands and Italy performed at least one quantitative analysis.
With regard to the forensic laboratories (Table 2
), almost all of them
performed identification of positive results, regardless of country.
Quantification of specific substances was carried out by 83% of German
laboratories, whereas ~50% of those in Italy did not report
quantification results. Analytical approaches of research-oriented
laboratories were as follows: 45% of laboratories performed only
screening vs 55% of laboratories performed at least one
identification. A total of 27% of research laboratories performed
quantification.

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Figure 1. Percentages of testing being performed for each analytical
approach (screening, identification, quantification) by clinical and
forensic laboratories.
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Table 2. Number of clinical and forensic laboratories performing
only screening or screening and identification of specific
substances.
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All participating laboratories screened for opiates. Amphetamines,
cocaine, and cannabinoids were analyzed by almost 9697% of
laboratories, and methadone received the lowest rate of analysis
(87%). When considering the rate of screening analysis performed in
each country, the lowest percentage was recorded for Portugal; half of
its participating laboratories did not screen for amphetamines and/or
methadone. In Spain, the rate for methadone screening was 70%, also
below the mean.
There were large differences among EU member states in the rate
of identification of specific substances (Table 3
). Although few Portuguese laboratories performed
identification, they covered nearly the full menu of drugs. In
contrast, all Danish laboratories performed identification but the rate
of analyses for each specific substance was low. Nearly the full menu
of drugs was also analyzed by French and German laboratories performing
identification, while in The Netherlands the rates of identification of
some substances were low. The largest differences in identification
rates by country corresponded (in decreasing order) to
6-acetylmorphine, EDDP, benzoylecgonine, ecgonine methyl ester, and
11-nor-9-carboxy-
-tetrahydrocannabinol. As
expected, more substances were identified by forensic laboratories than
by clinical laboratories. The greatest difference was found for
11-nor-9-carboxy-
-tetrahydrocannabinol. Important
differences were also noticed in the identification rates of
6-acetylmorphine, benzoylecgonine, and ecgonine methyl ester.
analytical methods
The use of either immunological or chromatographic techniques was
highly dependent on the purpose of the analytical step. The percentages
of analytical methods used for each analytical step and for each
country are shown in Table 4
(only those countries with a significant number of
participating laboratories are included).
Screening for groups of substances was mainly performed by
immunological techniques (91%), particularly enzyme immunoassay (EIA;
54%) and fluorescence polarization immunoassay (FPIA; 29%). In the
group of chromatographic techniques, thin-layer chromatography (TLC)
was the most common (5%). A large proportion of laboratories from
Denmark and the UK used EIA, whereas FPIA was more frequently used in
The Netherlands. The use of TLC as screening method was concentrated
mainly in Denmark and the UK. When comparing clinical and forensic
laboratories, no differences were observed in the percentages of use of
immunoassay vs chromatographic methods for screening purposes. Rates of
use of EIA and FPIA were also similar for both types of laboratories.
Nevertheless, there were differences with regard to the chromatographic
method used. Of screening analyses, 6% were performed by TLC by
clinical laboratories while only 1% of such analyses by forensic
laboratories were by TLC.
Identification/quantification of specific substances was mainly
performed by chromatographic methods (98% for identification, 90% for
quantification). Gas chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry
(GC/MS) was the main analytical technique used for identification and
quantification of specific substances (48% and 55%, respectively). A
few laboratories used immunoassay for identification, apparently
ignoring the fact that nonspecificity of immunoassays permits only
presumptive identification of drug classes so that specific
identification of drugs must await confirmation testing. A greater
percentage of quantitative analyses was performed by immunological
methods (10%), especially FPIA. Because immunoassays generally involve
cross-reactivity with metabolites, the quantified value is the sum of
analyte and metabolite reactivities and results are actually in
"calibrator-equivalent" units. GC/MS was the identification method
most often used in all countries but Denmark and the UK, where TLC
predominated. Regarding quantification, differences in GC/MS rate of
use among countries were also observed, Portugal and Spain being the
countries where more quantifications were performed by GC/MS (>80%).
In contrast, in Denmark GC/MS was not used by any laboratory. The
Netherlands and Italy were the countries with higher rates of
quantitative analyses performed by immunoassay. Analytical methods used
in clinical and forensic laboratories for identification and
quantification of specific substances are shown in Fig. 2
. TLC was the analytical method most often used by clinical
laboratories for identification analyses, GC/MS the more frequent among
forensic laboratories. The rate of use of GC/MS for quantitative
analyses was also higher among forensic laboratories. The use of
immunoassays for quantification was mainly concentrated in clinical
laboratories (28%); few quantitative analysis were performed by
forensic laboratories using immunoassays.

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Figure 2. Distribution of the percentages of testing being performed
with each analytical method by clinical and forensic laboratories for
identification and quantification of specific substances.
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cutoff concentrations
Given that specific regulations on cutoff (or threshold)
concentrations (3) for positivity have not yet been
developed, laboratories were requested to report the cutoff values they
used for drug screening and drug identification purposes (Table 5
).
In the screening step, although the cutoff ranges were wide, there was
good agreement in cutoff concentrations reported by laboratories. There
were some target values that most of them tended to use. On the other
hand, as many as 22% of screening analyses were performed without the
cutoff values being reported. For the amphetamines group, European
countries used more frequently the cutoff of 300 µg/L rather than the
1000 µg/L applied by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
Administration (SAMHSA) accredited laboratories (4). In
screening for cannabinoids, three cutoff values (100, 50, or 2025
µg/L) were applied, this being the group of substances with the
largest differences. For opiates, methadone, and cocaine groups, >85%
of laboratories used a cutoff value between 200 and 300 µg/L.
Laboratories using TLC showed higher cutoff values than laboratories
using Emit (Behring). In contrast, lower cutoff concentrations for some
analytes were observed among laboratories that used FPIA for screening
purposes as compared with those that used Emit. Because screening
techniques were mainly commercial immunoassays, one could expect that
the cutoff recommended by a manufacturer would be applied, and this was
done in most cases (e.g., 250 µg/L for methadone screening applied by
laboratories using FPIA; 20 µg/L cutoff by Emit and 25 µg/L by FPIA
for cannabinoids screening), although some laboratories reported
different cutoff concentrations than those expected, such as in 7.3%
of analysis performed with Emit.
When comparing clinical and forensic laboratories in the screening
step, the mean cutoff values were lower in forensic laboratories for
all groups of drugs (Fig. 3
). The percentage of laboratories not reporting a cutoff value,
and probably not applying a cutoff concentration in the screening
analysis, was greater for forensic than for clinical laboratories.

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Figure 3. Mean cutoff concentration applied by clinical and forensic
laboratories for each analyte (left bars) and percentage of
laboratories not reporting a cutoff concentration (right
bars) for screening purposes (top panel) or
identification (bottom panel).
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Mean cutoff concentrations applied by countries for each analyte
are shown in Table 6
. To obtain overall information on differences observed among
European countries, we established an arbitrary scoring system as
follows: For each analyte, the mean cutoff concentrations applied by
countries were sorted from the lowest to the highest, after which a
rank number from 1 to 9 (because 9 countries were evaluated) was
assigned to each and the numbers assigned to each analyte (5 in
screening) were summed for each country. The evaluation range thus went
from 5 to 45 arbitrary units (AU) for the screening, with the lowest
value corresponding to the country in which the lowest cutoff
concentrations were applied. Results obtained are shown in Fig. 4
. The analytical method and proportion between clinical and
forensic laboratories were the main factors that influenced the cutoff
values used.
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Table 6. Mean, mode, and frequency (freq.,%) of the mode of the
cutoff concentration applied when screening for each group of
substances in each country.
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Figure 4. Display of countries for application of cutoff
concentration, from the lowest to the highest values: arbitrary system
based on the mean cutoff used by each country for each analyte (see
text).
The scale ranges from 5 to 45 and from 9 to 81 arbitrary units for the
screening and identification analyses, respectively.
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For the identification of specific substances, there was a lack of
agreement in the cutoff concentrations, and the cutoff ranges were even
wider than in the screening step. Identification and screening cutoff
criteria for major urinary metabolites coincided in almost 30% of
laboratories. Theoretically, for the chromatographic identification of
a main metabolite, one would expect lower cutoff concentrations than
those applied for immunoassay screening of the group of drugs. This was
observed for 45.9% of analyses performed but, interestingly, 7.4% of
the laboratories used higher cutoff values in drug identification than
in drug screening. The remaining laboratories used the same cutoff
concentrations in both analytical steps. Agreement was even lower for
identification of the minor metabolites, where, in general, the cutoff
values used were lower than for the major metabolites.
When comparing clinical and forensic laboratories in the drug
identification step, the mean cutoff values used by the forensic
laboratories were lower for all substances except ecgonine methyl ester
(Fig. 3
). Discrepancies in the mode were found for the following
substances: amphetamine, 300 µg/L for clinical laboratories vs 200
µg/L for forensic laboratories; 6-acetylmorphine, 300 vs 1050
µg/L; EDDP, 300 vs 200 µg/L; ecgonine methyl ester, 20 vs 100
µg/L. As found in the screening step, a sizable number of
laboratories did not report cutoff concentrations (33% of
identification analysis were performed without cutoff specification),
but unlike the case in screening, forensic laboratories seemed to have
standardized cutoff concentrations for the identification of specific
substances more often than did the clinical laboratories.
Mean cutoff concentrations applied by countries for each specific
analyte are shown in Table 7
. An arbitrary scoring system following the same procedure as in
the screening evaluation was established but the evaluation range
varied between 9 and 81 AU because 9 variables were evaluated (ecgonine
methyl ester was excluded because data from only a few countries were
available); again, the lowest value corresponding to the country in
which the lowest cutoff concentrations were applied. The results are
shown in Fig. 4
. In those countries in which the use of TLC
predominated (UK, Denmark), cutoff values were higher than those
reported in countries using GC/MS (Portugal, France, Germany).
Additionally, those countries with a greater participation of clinical
laboratories reported higher cutoff concentrations. [Note that rates
of clinical and forensic laboratories differed between screening and
identification because many clinical laboratories did not perform
identification (see Table 2
).]
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Table 7. Mean, mode and frequency (freq.,%) of the mode of the
cutoff concentrations applied when identifying specific substances in
each country.
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Differences among countries in the use of cutoff values not only
reflect a lack of consensus in analytical/toxicological terms but also
may be interpreted as eventual differences in the degree of social
tolerance for the consumption of a given drug.
analytical results for survey samples
For identification of specific substances, an evaluation of
results reported by laboratories for each specific drug present in the
test samples was performed according the cutoff concentrations applied
by each laboratory. Results were classified into three groups:
(a) results reported by laboratories using cutoff values
clearly below the drug concentration present in the test samplefor
these cases, positive results were expected, in which case negative
results were considered falsely negative; (b) results
reported by laboratories using cutoff values in the range of drug
concentration present in the test sample (concentration mean
±30%)taking into account that quantitative analyses have a margin of
error, a critical evaluation of these cases was not possible and this
group was considered separately; (c) results reported by
laboratories using cutoff values clearly above the drug concentrations
present in the sample, in which case positive results were considered
falsely positiveon the assumption that the analytical methods used
had no sensitivity to detect the substances and (or) that the
toxicological criteria of these laboratories should have indicated not
to report results less than this concentration. Results are shown in
Fig. 5
. False-positive cases accounted for almost 50% of the results;
4% were false-negatives.

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Figure 5. Evaluation of results reported by participating
laboratories for identification of specific substances.
The cutoff concentration reported had been used for classifying each
result for each substance and for each laboratory as a real positive
(positive analytical result: cutoff < concentration;
left) or a real negative (negative analytical result:
cutoff > concentration; right) sample. In cases where
the cutoff applied was similar (±30%) to the concentration in the
sample, a separate group was considered (middle). Results
were considered falsely negative (FN) when a laboratory reported a
result as negative but the analyte was present in a concentration
higher than the cutoff used by the laboratory. Results were considered
falsely positive (FP) when a laboratory reported a result as positive
but the analyte was present in a concentration less than the
laboratory's cutoff value.
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Conclusions
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The total number of laboratories participating in this study was
large enough to draw several conclusions about the situation of drugs
of abuse testing in the EU. Because participation was voluntary, some
bias in the sample of participating laboratories in relation to the
whole population of European laboratories cannot be excluded. In five
countries (Czech Republic, Finland, Greece, Ireland, Luxembourg), the
number of participating laboratories was too small and were not
included in some evaluations by individual countries.
A predominant percentage of the EU laboratories performing drugs of
abuse analysis were noncommercial. Moreover, a higher proportion of
clinical than forensic laboratories performed drugs of abuse analysis,
although large variations in this ratio among countries were observed.
Differences in the analytical approach were clearly associated with the
type of laboratory (5)(6)(7)(8). As could be expected, forensic
laboratories performed more identification and quantification analyses
than clinical laboratories did. This finding is probably related to the
consequences that may be derived from the result of the analysis. In
addition, large differences in analytical approaches favored in each
country were seen that were independent of the type of laboratory
involved in drug testing.
Regarding the analytical methodology, a large proportion of
laboratories used commercial immunoassays for screening purposes.
Differences observed between countries in which immunoassay was more
often used were related to the position of each manufacturer in the
market of the countries. This observation has an impact not only
on the predominance of each immunoassay but also on the cutoff
concentrations applied in each country for each analyte. There was a
clear agreement between laboratories that used immunoassays for
screening purposes. Inappropriate methods such as immunoassays were
used either in the identification and quantification approach by some
laboratories. Although a sizable number of clinical laboratories used
TLC for the specific identification of substances, forensic
laboratories more often used instrumented chromatographic methods,
particularly GC/MS. In reference to the technology for quantification
of specific compounds, in some countries some of the clinical
laboratories used immunoassays rather than chromatographic techniques
for this.
Cutoff values routinely applied were more influenced by the analytical
method used than by the clinical or toxicological
significance of the test [(9)(10)(11), and IC
Dijkhuis, unpublished]. In the screening step, agreement in
cutoff concentrations applied was greater because screening analyses
were mainly performed with commercial immunoassays. The cutoff
concentrations reported by the laboratories were usually coincident
with the cutoff standardized for the commercial immunoassay used;
therefore, immunoassay kit manufacturers have played a very important
role in the standardization of cutoff concentrations applied by
European laboratories. For the identification of specific substances,
however, there was great variability in reporting cutoff
concentrations. No specific values, really, could be considered as
cutoff modes. The cutoff applied was more related to the sensitivity of
the analytical method than to the real toxicological criteria for
evaluating the results. Studies addressing the assessment of more
adequate cutoff concentrations have usually been promoted by
manufacturers of immunoassays and have focused on screening for groups
of substances by these techniques. The studies have seldom been
performed to evaluate the recommended cutoff concentrations for
identification of specific substances. This is one reason for the lower
agreement in the cutoff values used for drug identification purposes.
Forensic laboratories reported cutoff values in the screening
analytical step less frequently than clinical laboratories but did
specify cutoff concentrations for the identification of specific
substances more often. On the other hand, the cutoff concentrations
used by the forensic laboratories were lower than those of the clinical
ones. As a result of large differences in the analytical methods used,
there was great variability in the analytical cutoff concentrations
applied for reporting positive results.
There appears to be some misunderstanding about the meaning of a cutoff
value. An important number of analyses performed in samples containing
concentrations less than a reported cutoff value were reported as
positive, which clearly indicates that, in practice, the cutoff value
reported was not applied by some laboratories.
In the US, the development of SAMHSA (formerly National Institute on
Drug Abuse; NIDA) guidelines has provided some uniformity in
drug-testing procedures, particularly at the workplace. In some
countries, the lack of specific rules has led some European
laboratories to adopt SAMHSA regulations. The substantial variability
observed among different countries of the EU in the individual
approaches to urine drug testing with respect to the analytical
strategy applied is of great concern in situations where the same
individual can be tested in different EU countries. The diversity of
cutoffs in use most probably reflects the many different reasons for
and purposes of the drug of abuse testing programs. Given the current
situation, however, different results can be expected from a single
sample, depending on the analytical criteria applied by the laboratory
and the country in which the sample is analyzed. This situation
generates confusion and may consequently affect the credibility of the
laboratories. Thus, in reporting analytical results, the cutoff
criteria and analytical methods used should be formally stated.
Although reaching a general consensus on criteria to analyze drugs of
abuse is quite difficult, some specific areas such as workplace drug
testing, where up-to-date clinical and forensic laboratories are
involved, will help bring about this consensus. In fact,
recommendations for the reliable detection of drugs of abuse in urine
with particular reference to the workplace have recently been published
(12).
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Acknowledgments
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We are indebted to M.T. Van der Venne and J.C. Berger (Commission
of the European Union), Ch. Gilliard and F. Parmentier (Belgium), K.
Worm (Denmark), P. Lafargue and P. Mangin (France), M.R. Möller
and R.K. Müller (Germany), H. Tsoukalis (Greece), A. Pierce
(Ireland), U. Avico, E. Sternieri, S.D. Ferrara (Italy), R. Wenning
(Luxembourg), R.A. De Zeeuw and I.C. Dijkhuis (The Netherlands), D.A.
Carrondo Tome dos Reis (Portugal), and M.D. Osselton and J. Williams
(UK), members of the European Toxicological Working Group, for their
valuable assistance in the design of the study. The following
laboratories are also acknowledged for their support as reference
laboratories: Institute of Toxicology (Oslo, Norway), Institute of
Legal Medicine (Padova, Italy), National Poisons Unit (London, UK),
Psychiatric Diagnostic Labs. America (South Plainfield, NJ), Smithkline
Beecham Lab. (Atlanta, GA), Foothill Hospital (Calgary, Canada),
Institute für Rechtsmedizin (Homburg/Saar, Germany), and National
Lab. of Forensic Chemistry (Linkoping, Sweden). We are grateful to the
Dirección General de Farmacia y Productos Sanitarios (Spain) and
to the NIDA Drug Supply System for their supply of reference
substances, to the Department of Psychiatry of Hospital del Mar for
their supply of clinical urines, to the Clinical Trials Unit of the
Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology at IMIM for their supply of
excretion studies, and to Anna Artola, Alicia Redón, Marta
Carnicero, and Marisa González for excellent technical
assistance, Javier Morano for computer work, Rosa Herrera for
secretarial help, and Marta Pulido for editing the manuscript and
editorial assistance.
The Commission of the European Union has provided financial support for
this study (re 92 CVVE 1-264-0; 93202764 05E01; 96CVVF2-201-0). Neither
the European Commission nor any person acting in the name of the
Commission is to be held responsible for the use made of the
information contained in this report.
 |
Footnotes
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Drug Abuse Research Unit, Institut Municipal d'Investigació Mèdica (IMIM), Autonomous University of Barcelona, Doctor Aiguader 80, E-08003 Barcelona, Spain.
1 Nonstandard abbreviations: EU, European Union; EDDP, 1,5-dimethyl-3,3-diphenyl-2-ethylidiene-pyrrolidine; EIA, enzyme immunoassay; FPIA, fluorescence polarization immunoassay; TLC, thin-layer chromatography; GC/MS, gas chromatographymass spectrometry; and SAMHSA, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. 
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