During alcohol detoxification, EtG and EtS remained detectable in urine for several days. The detection times showed wide inter-individual variations, also after adjusting values for urine dilution and to the estimated times for a completed ethanol elimination.
These results indicated a high level of accuracy and selectivity of the DRI-EtG EIA for quantification of urinary EtG. In the absence of a commonly accepted cut-off limit for urinary EtG, a threshold of 0.5 mg/L (2.2 mumol/L) is proposed, to obtain a high sensitivity but avoid positive results due to unintentional ethanol exposure.
This study compared measurement of urinary ethyl glucuronide (EtG), a conjugated minor ethanol metabolite with a longer detection window than ethanol itself, with breath alcohol testing and self-report as ways to disclose recent drinking by 18 liver transplant candidates with an alcoholic liver disease diagnosis that underwent an addiction group therapy program. At each therapy session, patients were questioned about any alcohol consumption in the intervening time, and they also performed a mandatory breath alcohol test, while observed urine samples for measurement of EtG were delivered on a voluntary basis. None of the patients ever admitted to intake of alcohol, and only 1 of 127 breath alcohol tests turned out positive. However, 9 patients showed positive EtG results in 24 (49%) of 49 urine samples. The individual frequency of urine samples being positive for EtG ranged from 22% to 100% with a mean value of 57%. Because 6 patients refused to provide urine on a total of 18 occasions, alcohol use might have been even more common. These results underscore the uncertainty of self-report data and the low sensitivity of breath alcohol testing as ways to disclose recent drinking, and underline the necessity of introducing sensitive and specific objective measures of recent alcohol consumption, such as EtG, in the transplantation setting. Liver Transpl 13:757-761, 2007.
Aims
The study documented elimination characteristics of three phosphatidylethanol (PEth) homologs in serially collected blood samples from 47 heavy drinkers during ~2 weeks of alcohol detoxification at hospital.
Methods
Venous whole blood and urine samples were collected every 1–2 days during treatment. Concentrations of PEth, and of urinary ethyl glucuronide (EtG) and ethyl sulfate (EtS) to detect relapse drinking, were measured using liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry.
Results
When included in the study, negative or decreasing breath ethanol concentrations demonstrated that the patients were in the elimination phase. The EtG and EtS measurements further confirmed alcohol abstinence during the study, with three exceptions. On admission, all patients tested positive for PEth, the total concentration ranging 0.82–11.7 (mean 6.35, median 5.88) μmol/l. PEth 16:0/18:1, 16:0/18:2 and 16:0/20:4 accounted for on average ~42%, ~26% and ~9%, respectively, of total PEth in these samples. There were good correlations between total PEth and individual homologs (P < 0.0001). There was no significant difference in PEth values between male and female subjects. During abstinence, the elimination half-life values ranged 3.5–9.8 days for total PEth, 3.7–10.4 days for PEth 16:0/18:1, 2.7–8.5 days for PEth 16:0/18:2 and 2.3–8.4 days for PEth 16:0/20:4.
Conclusions
The results demonstrated a very high sensitivity (100%) of PEth as alcohol biomarker for recent heavy drinking, but considerable differences in the elimination rates between individuals and between different PEth forms. This indicates that it is possible to make only approximate estimates of the quantity and recency of alcohol intake based on a single PEth value.
PVAT seems to play an independent role in the pathogenesis of insulin resistance. This may be due to direct vascular effects influencing muscular blood flow.
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