A low urinary concentration of methamphetamine less than 1% of the amphetamine level may not necessarily indicate polydrug use. Instead, it could result from N-methylation of amphetamine. Chiral analysis of both amphetamines is an effective method for distinguishing between illicit use and therapeutic sources in positive drug screening results.
ABSTRACT
Methamphetamine is relatively uncommon on the European drug market, but Swedish drug test laboratories repeatedly detect low methamphetamine concentrations in urine samples containing high amphetamine levels, warranting clinical evaluation for suspected polydrug use. Of 12,062 routine samples screened positive for amphetamines, 86% were confirmed positive (≥ 200 μg/L) for amphetamine, 2.1% for methamphetamine, and 4.0% for 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (ecstasy) by liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry. Of the 259 methamphetamine-positive samples, 98% contained amphetamine concentrations above the reporting limit, consistent with the metabolic conversion of methamphetamine to amphetamine in the body. However, in most (69%) of these samples, the methamphetamine concentration was only < 2% of the amphetamine level, suggesting methamphetamine was not the primary drug taken. Chiral analysis of selected samples showed that after use of illicit street amphetamine with a racemic content of the l– and d-enantiomers, a similar l/d proportion was observed for methamphetamine. Similarly, in samples from patients receiving d-amphetamine-based ADHD medication, low d-methamphetamine levels were detected, even though the pharmaceutical products contained no methamphetamine. This observation, together with the parallel l/d-enantiomer distributions, supports amphetamine N-methylation as a trace, albeit quantitatively insignificant, metabolic pathway in humans. From both a clinical and forensic perspective, a low urinary methamphetamine concentration of less than a few percent of the amphetamine level therefore does not warrant further clinical evaluation for suspected polydrug use. The present findings further demonstrate that chiral analysis of both amphetamine and methamphetamine is an effective approach for distinguishing between illicit and therapeutic sources in positive screening drug tests for the amphetamines.