Alcohol Abstinence Programs; An Overview of the Latest Testing Technology

Expanding Alcohol Testing Programs Ensure Compliance in Alcohol Restrictive Programs



For most, passing an alcohol screening test, has been relatively simple. When considering alcohol’s short half-life, the detection of alcohol, in a urine sample, was difficult to prove by laboratory testing centers especially when considering
 fermentation, age and other health indications which can proof a false positive result. With modern technology, however, the alcohol screening test has become more sensitive in what is known as the ethyl glucuronide, or EtG, test. With development of this alcohol screening program, employers, law enforcement officials as well as physicians are now able to more easily detect alcohol consumption.

The latest in alcohol screening involved the screening of ethyl glucuronide, also known as EtG. Found in the body, as a metabolite of alcohol consumption, EtG testing is impossible to pass until 80 hours beyond the last consumption of alcohol. For those individuals in an alcohol abstinence program, EtG testing is the latest in alcohol testing and, for many, is unknown.

Ethyl glucuronide (EtG) is formed, in the liver, by combining alcohol with the liver’s natural glucuronic acid. When combined, ethyl glucuronide (EtG) is created. Detected in the blood screen for 36 hours, EtG can be detected in the urine for up to 80 hours following consumption. In rare case, detection into 5 days has been known in very heavy alcohol consumption.

What is important to understand, for those in an alcohol restricted program, is the ability of a laboratory department to detect ethyl glucuronide even with urine samples as old as four days kept at room temperature. For this reason, swapping out a urine sample with an aged sample is not prudent in passing this EtG screening.

Technically speaking, the EtG alcohol screening test is done in a highly sophisticated laboratory using LC/MS/MS, also known as liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry/mass spectrometry. In this method, the EtG is isolated and quantified. For most law enforcement programs, EtG screening cut off levels are recommended at 100 ng/mL which is the most sensitive of screening.

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The EtG test is a good test, but only in limited situations. It definately has its good and bad points. For more information on the EtG test you should see http://www.uatests.com/types-of-drug-tests/alcohol-drug-tests/etg-ethyl-glucuronide-test.html

Posted on 01/08/2009 at 1:01:13 PM

i like the sentence where it says "Found in the body, as a metabolite of alcohol consumption, EtG testing is impossible to pass until 80 hours beyond the last consumption of alcohol." NOT TRUE. I have reveiwed labs reports that say that one drink of alchohal is undetectable in an etg test after 30 hours. Stupid article.

Posted on 09/08/2008 at 2:09:16 PM

this is definatley a concern for people who cannot afford false positives, understandably the system always wants a better way to track everything we do. to bad so many innocent people might have to pay.

Posted on 09/01/2008 at 4:09:45 PM

I agree with Thomas, there is a federal investigation on the use of this test as I last read due to the false positives.

Posted on 12/03/2007 at 10:12:00 PM

Thats the most one sided pro law enforcement column ive seen on etg yet,it said nothing about false-positives caused by everyday household products like deoderants,colonge,perfumes,areosols,pretty much anything with ethanol in it.The test,(and ets also)is simply too sensitive to determine that a person was in fact drinking alcohol instead of spraying a room with lysol or some other areosol contaning ethanol,or applying colonge or perfume.Get the facts straight,tell the entire story or dont tell at all.

Posted on 11/23/2007 at 3:11:00 AM

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