Drexel Medicine Diagnostics Toxicology Services
Cocaine Metabolite, Urine, Quantitative
OVERVIEW
Purpose: Detecting and confirming drug abuse involving cocaine.
CLINICAL INFORMATION
Cocaine is sometimes used clinically as a local anesthetic. More commonly however, it is used illicitly. Identification and verification of cocaine's metabolite benzoylecgonine in urine is most often used to show illicit use. Cocaine use is declining across the nation according to the National Institute of Drug Abuse. Increasingly, laboratory results are disputed or there are medical/legal overtones. Therefore, physicians are finding an increased need to confirm positive results before informing or confronting the patients.
SPECIMEN COLLECTION
Specimen Type: Random Urine
Preferred Collection Container: Non-sterile specimen container
Specimen Required: 3 mL urine; minimum 1 mL
TEST DETAILS
Methodology: Liquid Chromatography-Tandem Mass Spectrometry (LC-MS/MS)
Compliance Category: Laboratory Developed Test (LDT)
This test was developed and assessed by DMD in compliance with CLIA requirements for its analytical performance characteristics and clinical application. This test has not been cleared or approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
Reference Interval: Negative
Drug/Metabolite Tested:
Drug/Metabolite Cutoff concentration 500 ng/mL
Benzoylecgonine 50 ng/mL
CPT code(s): 80353
Turnaround Time: 90% < 48 hours, 50% < 24 hours
SPECIMEN PROCESSING
Transport Temperature: Refrigerated (preferred) or room temperature overnight shipping.
Specimen Stability: 3 days at room temperature and 14 days at refrigerated and frozen temperatures (to be further confirmed with our validation).
Rejection Criteria: Stability limits exceeded.
Director: Cheryl Hanau, MD; Donald Hall Jr., PhD; Garth Ehrlich, PhD; Yinghua Qiu, PhD, DABCC
Review Date: 08/28/2023
Note: The billing party has sole responsibility for CPT coding. Any questions regarding coding should be directed to the payer being billed. The CPT codes provided by GML are based on AMA guidelines and are for informational purposes only.
The information on these pages is provided for general information only and should not be used for diagnosis or treatment, or as a substitute for consultation with a physician or health care professional. If you have specific questions or concerns about your health, you should consult your health care professional.
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