Drug testing and analysis | 2019

A systematic investigation of forensic hair decontamination procedures and their limitations.

 
 
 
 

Abstract


The effectiveness of decontamination procedures used for the removal of external drug contamination in forensic hair analysis is an ongoing debate. This investigation evaluated wash methods complying with Society of Hair Testing (SoHT) guidelines and their capacity to remove cocaine (COC) and methamphetamine (MA) from artificially contaminated hair. The most effective decontamination method was determined using a systematic approach, involving: (1) an initial washing solvent screen; (2) optimisation of wash duration; (3) comparison of sequential wash methods; and (4) reanalysis of clinical hair samples. For analysis, hair was subjected to micropulverised methanolic extraction prior to quantitation by UHPLC-MSMS. Methanol (MeOH) and 0.1M phosphate buffer (pH 6) were the most effective organic and aqueous solvents, respectively, removing 28-38% of COC and 16-31% of MA. Wash durations longer than 30-60 min did not remove additional amounts, and a more efficient sequential wash method was subsequently developed. Despite this, the interpretation of reportable results relative to the SoHT cut-off levels was unchanged for most clinical hair samples reanalysed after washing by agitation for 30 min with MeOH. These findings highlight the inability of decontamination solvents to completely remove external COC and MA contamination from hair, including wash methods adhering to SoHT guidelines.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1002/dta.2681
Language English
Journal Drug testing and analysis

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