False-positive reports on urine drug screens by immunoassay are rare (strength of recommendation [SOR]: C, small controlled-exposure studies, small case series). Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, fluoroquinolones, and Vicks Inhaler are most frequently implicated (TABLE).
Ruling out a false-positive result requires confirmation with a more specific test, usually gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC-MS). A true-positive drug screen may occur in a urine specimen from a patient who legally or unknowingly ingests a product that is metabolized to a drug of abuse. Passive exposure to a substance is unlikely to cause a positive drug screen (SOR: B, small controlled-exposure studies).
Having a plan makes communication less emotional when the results come back
Mary M. Stephens, MD, MPH
East Tennessee State University, Kingsport
Before I order a urine drug screen I ask myself, “What will I do with the results?” If other substances are present, will I discontinue controlled substances or refer to psychiatry or pain management? I also ask patients what they think I will find. On several occasions, patients have admitted to taking recreational drugs that the drug screen misses. Having a plan makes communication less emotional for both the provider and patient when the results come back.
You should be able to follow-up results promptly and order a GC-MS if indicated. In addition, if working in a group, indicate a plan for follow-up in your progress notes so that the patient gets a consistent message.
Evidence summary
Two different assays are commonly available for urine drug testing. The immunoassay is quick, highly sensitive, and relatively inexpensive but may lack specificity. It tests for classes of drugs (such as opiates) without distinguishing among individual drugs within that class. Gas chromatography in combination with mass spectrometry (GC-MS) is a more expensive and time-consuming test, but is the gold standard for confirming a positive result on immunoassay. By definition, all positive results on GC-MS are true positives.
Reports of false-positive urine drug screening for substances of abuse are infrequent and limited to case reports and a few controlled-exposure studies. The TABLE lists some of the substances reported to cause false-positive results.
Positive confirmation tests may occur in urine specimens from patients who legally or unknowingly ingest products that contain drugs of abuse. In these instances, the finding is a true positive but may not reflect drug abuse by the client. Many products available without prescription outside of the US contain opiates (eg, Donnagel PG from Canada).1 Several controlled-exposure studies have shown that as little as 1 poppy seed muffin (about 15 g of seed) can produce detectable amounts of morphine and codeine by immunoassay as well as GC-MS.1,2 In 1998, the federal government increased the threshold defining a positive screen for urine morphine and codeine from 300 to 2000 ng/mL to reduce spurious reports of opiate-positive tests from poppy seed consumption.1,2
Substances that do not produce positive urine drug screens include passively inhaled crack cocaine or marijuana (unless “extreme”), and ingested products containing hemp or other common herbal preparations.1,2,10 In one study, 6 volunteers in an 8×8×7-ft enclosed room were exposed to 200 mg freebase cocaine vapor; none of their urine samples exceeded the federal GC-MS threshold. In a similar study of 3 non-smokers exposed to 8 marijuana smokers (smoking 32 joints) in a 10×10×8-ft enclosed room, no samples from the nonsmokers exceeded the federal GC-MS threshold.2 In an exposure study of 90 volunteers who ingested 8 different herbal preparations, there were no positive urine drug screens.1
TABLE
Substances reported to cause false-positive urine drug screen results
SUBSTANCE FALSELY IDENTIFIED ON TEST | ACTUALSUBSTANCE | TYPE OF STUDY | NOTES |
---|---|---|---|
Amphetamine and methamphetamine | Selegiline | Single case report1,2 | L-stereoisomer only detected (D-stereoisomer present in illicit drugs) |
Amphetamine and methamphetamine | Vicks Inhaler | Several case reports, controlled-exposure studies1-3 | L-stereoisomer only detected; most positives noted with twice recommended dosage |
Barbiturate | NSAIDs (ibuprofen, naproxen) | Controlled-exposure study of 60 subjects (510 specimens)4 | 0.4% false-positive rate |
Benzodiazepine | Oxaprozin | Controlled-exposure study of 12 patients (36 specimens)5 | 100% false-positive rate, some cases lack controls |
Cannabinoid | NSAIDs (ibuprofen, naproxen) | Controlled-exposure study of 60 subjects (510 specimens)4 | 0.4% false-positive rate |
Opiate | Fluoroquinolone* | Controlled-exposure studies (8 subjects) and case series (9 subjects)6 | Most levels detected were below new 1998 threshold (2000 ng/mL) |
Opiate | Rifampin | 3 case reports7 | |
Phencyclidine | Venlafaxine | 1case report8 | Confirmed by GC-MS (7200 mg intentionally ingested) |
Phencyclidine | Dextromethorphan | 1case report9 | (500 mg ingested) |
*Ofloxacin and levofloxacin most likely to cause false positive. |
Recommendations from others
The US Department of Health and Human Services requires confirmation of positive immunoassay results by GC-MS for drug testing in the workplace.1 The College of American Pathologists, the principal organization of board-certified pathologists, states: “Confirmation testing, a standard of practice in forensic toxicology, should be performed in clinical toxicology whenever possible.”11