We use cookies to understand how you use our site and to improve your experience. This includes personalizing content and advertising. To learn more, click here. By continuing to use our site, you accept our use of cookies. Cookie Policy.

LabMedica

Download Mobile App
Recent News Expo Medica 2024 Clinical Chem. Molecular Diagnostics Hematology Immunology Microbiology Pathology Technology Industry Focus

How People Try to Beat Drug Testing and Defend Positive Results

By Kim Scott (AACC)
Posted on 12 Jul 2022
Drug abuse is a critical problem throughout the world. While opioids are a significant public health concern, accounting for 2.88 million visits to emergency departments in the U.S. in 2016 and 2017, other drugs are also abused on a regular basis, including cocaine, amphetamines, and benzodiazepines.

In 1986, President Reagan directed federal agencies to achieve a drug-free work environment. Many private employers also employ drug testing to ensure their workplaces are safe. Approximately 20 million people are screened each year in the U.S. in workplace drug testing programs, said Amitava Dasgupta, PhD, professor of pathology and laboratory medicine at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City.

Image: How People Try to Beat Drug Testing and Defend Positive Results (Photo courtesy of aacc.org)
Image: How People Try to Beat Drug Testing and Defend Positive Results (Photo courtesy of aacc.org)

Dasgupta will discuss ways that people try to beat drug tests and strategies clinical laboratories can use to detect adulterated specimens during a roundtable session “How People Try to Beat Drug Testing and Defend Positive Results” at the 2022 AACC Annual Scientific Meeting and Clinical Lab Expo on July 24-28 in Chicago.

About 2% of people undergoing drug testing attempt to “beat” the tests, Dasgupta said. Some people try to beat drug tests by ingesting detoxifying agents designed to flush out drugs and metabolites. Others add adulterants to their urine, such as common household chemicals –laundry bleach, table salt, toilet bowl cleaner, and vinegar. While these types of adulterants are fairly easy to identify, there are chemicals that can be purchased online that are more difficult to identify in urine. In addition, some individuals purchase synthetic urine online in an attempt to beat drug tests in settings where collection of a urine specimen is not supervised.

When attempts to beat drug tests fail and a test comes back positive, individuals sometimes blame the positive result on other issues, such as eating food with poppyseeds, inhaling second-hand marijuana smoke, or taking CBD products for pain.

Dasgupta will also discuss ways to debunk common defenses of positive drug tests. “This is a very important topic because we want to have a drug-free workplace, and lab medicine professionals who are involved in the field of toxicology testing play a big role in helping ensure a safe workplace,” he said. “It’s important to know ways in which people can try to beat drug tests so you know what to look out for.”

Among the topics that will be covered during this session:

“There are 14,000 sites on the internet that tell you how to beat a drug test, Dasgupta noted. “My goal is to make sure that toxicologists know how people try to beat tests so they can be prepared in advance.”




Gold Member
Hematology Analyzer
Swelab Lumi
Automated Blood Typing System
IH-500 NEXT
New
FLU/RSV Test
Humasis FLU/RSV Combo
New
Entamoeba One Step Card Test
CerTest Entamoeba

Latest AACC 2022 News

AACC 2022 Review: International Meetings Rebound After Suffering Long COVID Hiatus

Faster Method Diagnoses Pediatric Urinary Tract Infections

Tianlong Showcases Integrated PCR Lab Solutions at AACC 2022