Seminars in Diagnostic Pathology
Volume 26, Issue 1 , Pages 18-27, February 2009

A review of the use of ethyl glucuronide as a marker for ethanol consumption in forensic and clinical medicine

  • Robert B. Palmer, PhD

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationAddress reprint requests and correspondence: Robert B. Palmer, PhD, Toxicology Associates, Prof LLC, 2555 South Downing Street, Suite 260, Denver, CO 80210

University of Colorado School of Medicine, Denver, Colorado

Ethyl glucuronide (EtG) is a direct phase-II metabolite of ethanol formed through the UDP-glucuronosyl transferase catalyzed conjugation of ethanol with glucuronic acid. It has been detected in many antemortem and postmortem biological matrices using a variety of analytical methods. Due to its long urinary elimination time, detectability in hair, specificity for ethanol exposure, and low detection limits of assays, the use of EtG has been proposed as a marker of recent ethanol intake in a variety of clinical and legal settings, including medical monitoring for relapse, emergency department patient evaluation, postmortem assessments, and transportation accident investigation. However, challenges associated with factors such as establishing appropriate cut-off levels capable of distinguishing between drinking and nonbeverage sources of ethanol exposure, nonuniform laboratory reporting limits, sample stability, and microbial activity substantially complicate accurate interpretation of results. The following review briefly explores the history, utility, and limitations of EtG in contemporary medical and forensic practice.

Keywords: Ethyl glucuronide, Ethanol, Forensic, Alcoholism, Postmortem, Analytical

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PII: S0740-2570(08)00116-0

doi:10.1053/j.semdp.2008.12.005

Seminars in Diagnostic Pathology
Volume 26, Issue 1 , Pages 18-27, February 2009