A Novel Benchtop Time-of-Flight GC-MS System For High Throughput Qualitative And Quantitative Analysis of Drugs of Abuse in Human Urine
Posters | 2016 | LECOInstrumentation
Analysis of drugs of abuse in human urine underpins forensic toxicology clinical monitoring and quality control workflows. Rising illicit drug use and growing laboratory workloads demand high-throughput methods that deliver conclusive identification and accurate quantitation.
This study evaluates a compact benchtop time-of-flight GC-MS system for rapid qualitative and quantitative analysis of opiates barbiturates and stimulants in urine. The aim is to shorten sample preparation and analysis times while preserving sensitivity and spectral fidelity.
Urine samples were treated with urease at 37 °C to hydrolyze urea then alkalinized with NaOH and extracted with dichloromethane. After centrifugation the organic phase was dried over CaCl2 and spiked with calibration standards (5–1000 ng/mL). Solvent was evaporated under nitrogen and residues reconstituted in chloroform. Data processing used non-target deconvolution and spectral library matching alongside target analyte finding to generate calibration curves.
The method separated and acquired full mass spectra for a panel of opiates barbiturates and stimulants in under 10 minutes. Limits of detection were well below government cut-off levels (e.g. amobarbital 0.5 ng/mL vs 200 ng/mL; amphetamine 10 ng/mL vs 500 ng/mL). Calibration curves exhibited excellent linearity over 5–1000 ng/mL. Non-targeted deconvolution allowed identification of additional alkaloids steroids and pharmaceuticals. Overlaid total and extracted ion chromatograms confirmed reproducibility and resolution.
Further integration of benchtop TOF-GC-MS with automated sample handling and cloud-based data analysis will accelerate results. Machine learning–driven deconvolution and library matching may improve detection of novel psychoactive substances. Miniaturized systems and ambient ionization techniques could enable field-based and point-of-care drug screening.
The benchtop TOF-GC-MS platform achieves rapid reliable qualitative and quantitative analysis of drugs of abuse in urine with low detection limits minimal preparation and robust spectral fidelity, offering a powerful solution for modern analytical laboratories.
GC/MSD, GC/TOF
IndustriesForensics
ManufacturerAgilent Technologies, GERSTEL, LECO
Summary
Importance of Topic
Analysis of drugs of abuse in human urine underpins forensic toxicology clinical monitoring and quality control workflows. Rising illicit drug use and growing laboratory workloads demand high-throughput methods that deliver conclusive identification and accurate quantitation.
Objectives and Study Overview
This study evaluates a compact benchtop time-of-flight GC-MS system for rapid qualitative and quantitative analysis of opiates barbiturates and stimulants in urine. The aim is to shorten sample preparation and analysis times while preserving sensitivity and spectral fidelity.
Methodology
Urine samples were treated with urease at 37 °C to hydrolyze urea then alkalinized with NaOH and extracted with dichloromethane. After centrifugation the organic phase was dried over CaCl2 and spiked with calibration standards (5–1000 ng/mL). Solvent was evaporated under nitrogen and residues reconstituted in chloroform. Data processing used non-target deconvolution and spectral library matching alongside target analyte finding to generate calibration curves.
Used Instrumentation
- Gas chromatograph Agilent 7890 with MPS2 autosampler
- Column Rxi-5ms 20 m × 0.18 mm i.d. × 0.18 µm (Restek)
- Carrier gas helium at 1.4 mL/min
- Temperature program 50 °C (0.5 min) ramp 50 °C/min to 320 °C hold 5 min
- Time-of-flight mass spectrometer LECO Pegasus BT
- Electron ionization source 250 °C mass range m/z 35–650 acquisition rate 20 spectra/s
Main Results and Discussion
The method separated and acquired full mass spectra for a panel of opiates barbiturates and stimulants in under 10 minutes. Limits of detection were well below government cut-off levels (e.g. amobarbital 0.5 ng/mL vs 200 ng/mL; amphetamine 10 ng/mL vs 500 ng/mL). Calibration curves exhibited excellent linearity over 5–1000 ng/mL. Non-targeted deconvolution allowed identification of additional alkaloids steroids and pharmaceuticals. Overlaid total and extracted ion chromatograms confirmed reproducibility and resolution.
Benefits and Practical Applications
- High throughput screening with run times under 10 minutes
- Sensitive detection of multiple drug classes without derivatization
- Full spectral data support retrospective and non-targeted analysis
- Broad dynamic range suitable for forensic clinical and QA/QC laboratories
Future Trends and Opportunities
Further integration of benchtop TOF-GC-MS with automated sample handling and cloud-based data analysis will accelerate results. Machine learning–driven deconvolution and library matching may improve detection of novel psychoactive substances. Miniaturized systems and ambient ionization techniques could enable field-based and point-of-care drug screening.
Conclusion
The benchtop TOF-GC-MS platform achieves rapid reliable qualitative and quantitative analysis of drugs of abuse in urine with low detection limits minimal preparation and robust spectral fidelity, offering a powerful solution for modern analytical laboratories.
References
- [1] Pizzo Pat INTERPRETATION OF DRUG TEST RESULTS National Association of Drug Court Professionals 2015
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