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Effect of Blood Collection Time on Measured Δ9-Tetrahydrocannabinol Concentrations: Implications for Driving Interpretation and Drug Policy
by
Huestis, Marilyn A
, Spurgin, Andrew
, Brown, Timothy L
, Gaffney, Gary R
, Milavetz, Gary
, Gorelick, David A
, Hartman, Rebecca L
in
Accidents, Traffic
/ Adult
/ Automobile Driving
/ Blood Chemical Analysis - methods
/ Blood Specimen Collection - methods
/ Dronabinol - blood
/ Ethanol - administration & dosage
/ Ethanol - analysis
/ Female
/ Forensic Medicine - methods
/ Humans
/ Male
/ Marijuana Smoking - blood
/ Substance Abuse Detection - methods
/ Time Factors
/ Young Adult
2016
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Effect of Blood Collection Time on Measured Δ9-Tetrahydrocannabinol Concentrations: Implications for Driving Interpretation and Drug Policy
by
Huestis, Marilyn A
, Spurgin, Andrew
, Brown, Timothy L
, Gaffney, Gary R
, Milavetz, Gary
, Gorelick, David A
, Hartman, Rebecca L
in
Accidents, Traffic
/ Adult
/ Automobile Driving
/ Blood Chemical Analysis - methods
/ Blood Specimen Collection - methods
/ Dronabinol - blood
/ Ethanol - administration & dosage
/ Ethanol - analysis
/ Female
/ Forensic Medicine - methods
/ Humans
/ Male
/ Marijuana Smoking - blood
/ Substance Abuse Detection - methods
/ Time Factors
/ Young Adult
2016
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Effect of Blood Collection Time on Measured Δ9-Tetrahydrocannabinol Concentrations: Implications for Driving Interpretation and Drug Policy
by
Huestis, Marilyn A
, Spurgin, Andrew
, Brown, Timothy L
, Gaffney, Gary R
, Milavetz, Gary
, Gorelick, David A
, Hartman, Rebecca L
in
Accidents, Traffic
/ Adult
/ Automobile Driving
/ Blood Chemical Analysis - methods
/ Blood Specimen Collection - methods
/ Dronabinol - blood
/ Ethanol - administration & dosage
/ Ethanol - analysis
/ Female
/ Forensic Medicine - methods
/ Humans
/ Male
/ Marijuana Smoking - blood
/ Substance Abuse Detection - methods
/ Time Factors
/ Young Adult
2016
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Effect of Blood Collection Time on Measured Δ9-Tetrahydrocannabinol Concentrations: Implications for Driving Interpretation and Drug Policy
Journal Article
Effect of Blood Collection Time on Measured Δ9-Tetrahydrocannabinol Concentrations: Implications for Driving Interpretation and Drug Policy
2016
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Overview
In driving-under-the-influence cases, blood typically is collected approximately 1.5-4 h after an incident, with unknown last intake time. This complicates blood Δ(9)-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) interpretation, owing to rapidly decreasing concentrations immediately after inhalation. We evaluated how decreases in blood THC concentration before collection may affect interpretation of toxicological results.
Adult cannabis smokers (≥1×/3 months, ≤3 days/week) drank placebo or low-dose alcohol (approximately 0.065% peak breath alcohol concentration) 10 min before inhaling 500 mg placebo, 2.9%, or 6.7% vaporized THC (within-individuals), then took simulated drives 0.5-1.3 h postdose. Blood THC concentrations were determined before and up to 8.3 h postdose (limit of quantification 1 μg/L).
In 18 participants, observed Cmax (at 0.17 h) for active (2.9 or 6.7% THC) cannabis were [median (range)] 38.2 μg/L (11.4-137) without alcohol and 47.9 μg/L (13.0-210) with alcohol. THC Cmax concentration decreased 73.5% (3.3%-89.5%) without alcohol and 75.1% (11.5%-85.4%) with alcohol in the first half-hour after active cannabis and 90.3% (76.1%-100%) and 91.3% (53.8%-97.0%), respectively, by 1.4 h postdose. When residual THC (from previous self-administration) was present, concentrations rapidly decreased to preinhalation baselines and fluctuated around them. During-drive THC concentrations previously associated with impairment (≥8.2 μg/L) decreased to median <5 μg/L by 3.3 h postdose and <2 μg/L by 4.8 h postdose; only 1 participant had THC ≥5 μg/L after 3.3 h.
Forensic blood THC concentrations may be lower than common per se cutoffs despite greatly exceeding them while driving. Concentrations during driving cannot be back-extrapolated because of unknown time after intake and interindividual variability in rates of decrease.
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