Publications by authors named "S Uljon"

Background: The COVID-19 pandemic reportedly had a significant impact on drug and alcohol use. In this article, we determine positivity rates for urine drugs of abuse and blood alcohol in 5 emergency departments (ED) in the greater Boston metropolitan area over a 4-year period (pre-, during, and post-COVID-19 pandemic).

Methods: Positivity rates for the urine drug screening (UDS) panel and blood alcohol concentration (>80 mg/dL; over the legal limit in MA) were calculated in patients presenting to one of the 5 ED (2 academic hospitals in Boston, MA and 3 community hospitals outside Boston, MA) during each of the 4 different time periods: pre-COVID (January 1, 2019 to December 31, 2019), stay-at-home (March 24, 2020 to May 18, 2020), during COVID (May 19, 2020 to March 28, 2021), and post-COVID (May 12, 2023 to August 31, 2023).

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Introduction: Benzodiazepines are frequently prescribed and misused therefore urine drug screening (UDS) is performed in many patient populations. Most current benzodiazepine immunoassays have poor sensitivity, particularly for detecting the metabolites of newer benzodiazepines such as lorazepam in urine.

Objectives: We aimed to verify the clinical performance of the new qualitative Roche Benzodiazepines II (BNZ2) immunoassay, as well as compare its performance to the Roche Benzodiazepines Plus (BENZ) assay in two patient populations: UDS in the emergency department (ED) and compliance monitoring.

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Background: Many fentanyl immunoassays are limited in their ability to detect norfentanyl. Urine specimens collected from individuals who have been exposed to fentanyl frequently have detectable concentrations of norfentanyl (≥2 ng/mL) but low concentrations of fentanyl (<2 ng/mL) by LC-MS/MS. The Lin-Zhi Fentanyl II Immunoassay (Lin-Zhi) claims 100% cross-reactivity with norfentanyl and therefore may detect exposure missed by other assays.

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Advances in fentanyl testing.

Adv Clin Chem

October 2023

Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid that was approved by the FDA in the late 1960s. In the decades since, non-prescription use of fentanyl, its analogs, and structurally unrelated novel synthetic opioids (NSO) has become a worsening public health crisis. There is a clear need for accessible testing for these substances in biological specimens and in apprehended drugs.

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