Casati Sara, Ravelli Alessandro, Bergamaschi Roberta F, Del Fabbro Massimo, Binelli Giorgio, Roda Gabriella, Orioli Marica
Laboratorio di Tossicologia Forense, Dipartimento di Scienze Biomediche, Chirurgiche ed Odontoiatriche, Università degli Studi di Milano, Milan, Italy.
Fondazione IRCCS Cà Granda, Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico, Milan, Italy.
Drug Test Anal. 2025 Jul 22. doi: 10.1002/dta.3934.
Monitoring long-term alcohol consumption is critical in forensic and public health contexts. Hair analysis of ethyl glucuronide (EtG), a direct metabolite of ethanol, has become a standard method for detecting chronic alcohol use. While the reliability of EtG hair testing is well established for short- and medium-term analyses, its stability in hair stored over extended periods has not been comprehensively evaluated. This limitation is especially relevant in retrospective investigations, postmortem evaluations, and long-term epidemiological studies, where archived samples may be analyzed years after collection. In this study, we assessed the long-term stability of EtG in human hair stored for up to 10 years. A total of 909 samples originally analyzed between 2013 and 2022 were re-tested in 2023 using a previously published and validated liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) method. When the results of the old and the new analyses were compared, EtG concentrations showed no significant degradation over time, with more than 80% of the samples displaying matching values when analytical uncertainty was considered. Only a small fraction of samples (4.4%) dropped below the commonly used interpretive threshold for chronic alcohol use (30 pg/mg) after 10 years of storage. These findings provide robust evidence that EtG remains chemically stable in hair under standard storage conditions over a decade, confirming the reliability of archived samples for assessing alcohol use history and expanding the utility of EtG analysis in long-term toxicological and forensic investigations. The demonstrated stability strengthens confidence in hair as a matrix for retrospective substance use evaluation across scientific disciplines.