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Concordance between substance use self-report and hair analysis in community-based adolescents

Natasha E. Wade, Ryan M. Sullivan, Susan F. Tapert, William E. Pelham, Marilyn A. Huestis, Krista M. Lisdahl, Frank Haist

2023The American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background: Accurate drug use identification through subjective self-report and toxicological biosample (hair) analysis are necessary to determine substance use sequelae in youth. Yet consistency between self-reported substance use and robust, toxicological analysis in a large sample of youth is understudied.Objectives: We aim to assess concordance between self-reported substance use and hair toxicological analysis in community-based adolescents.Methods: Hair results by LC-MS/MS and GC-MS/MS and self-reported past-year substance use from an Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study subsample (N = 1,390; ages 9–13; 48% female) were compared. The participants were selected for hair selection through two methods: high scores on a substance risk algorithm selected 93%; 7% were low-risk, randomly selected participants. Kappa coefficients the examined concordance between self-report and hair results.Results: 10% of youth self-reported any past-year substance use (e.g. alcohol, cannabis, nicotine, and opiates), while a mostly non-overlapping 10% had hair results indicating recent substance use (cannabis, alcohol, non-prescription amphetamines, cocaine, nicotine, opiates, and fentanyl). In randomly selected low-risk cases, 7% were confirmed positive in hair. Combining methods, 19% of the sample self-reported substance use and/or had a positive hair sample. Kappa coefficient of concordance between self-report and hair results was low (kappa = 0.07; p = .007).Conclusions: Hair toxicology identified substance use in high-risk and low-risk ABCD cohort subsamples. Given low concordance between hair results and self-report, reliance on either method alone would incorrectly categorize 9% as non-users. Multiple methods for characterizing substance use history in youth improves accuracy. Larger representative samples are needed to assess the prevalence of substance use in youth.

Topics & Concepts

ConcordanceCannabisHair analysisNicotineMedicineSubstance Abuse DetectionSubstance usePsychiatrySubstance abuseInternal medicinePathologyAlternative medicineForensic Toxicology and Drug AnalysisNeurotransmitter Receptor Influence on BehaviorMetabolomics and Mass Spectrometry Studies
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