Study: THC Stays in the Blood for Long Periods of Time

Blood Test

Study: THC Stays in the Blood for Long Periods of Time

According to a new study titled Residual blood THC levels in frequent cannabis users after over four hours of abstinence, the detection of THC in blood at levels greater than 2ng/ml may persist for long periods of time and thus makes drug tests potentially unreliable as it’s not an indicator of recent marijuana exposure. The study was published in the journal Drug and Alcohol Dependence.

For the study researchers performed a systematic review of the relevant literature assessing residual THC plasma levels in regular marijuana users.

The study states that “in all studies where participants were observed for over a day, blood THC [levels] in some participants remained detectable during several days of abstinence” – some subjects continuing to test positive for up to 30 days. Some demonstrated a “double hump” pattern “where their THC levels rose toward the end of the week after an initial decline.”

The study concludes: “The studies in our review consistently demonstrate that positive blood THC levels, even levels over 2ng/ml, do not necessarily indicate recent cannabis use in frequent cannabis users.” The full abstract:

 


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Background:

Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the primary psychoactive component of cannabis, causes psychomotor impairment and puts drivers at increased risk of motor vehicle collisions. Many jurisdictions have per se limits for THC, often 2 or 5 ng/mL, that make it illegal to drive with THC above the “legal limit”.

People who use cannabis regularly develop partial tolerance to some of its impairing effects. Regular cannabis users may also have persistent elevation of THC even after a period of abstinence. Some stakeholders worry that current per se limits may criminalize unimpaired drivers simply because they use cannabis. We conducted a systematic review of published literature to investigate residual blood THC concentrations in frequent cannabis users after a period of abstinence.

 

Methods: 

We identified relevant articles by combining terms for “cannabis” and “blood” and “concentration” and “abstinence” and searching MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsycINFO, and Web of Science. We included studies that reported THC levels in frequent cannabis users after more than 4 h of abstinence.


Results:

Our search identified 1612 articles of which 8 met our inclusion criteria. After accounting for duplicate publications, we had identified 6 independent studies. These studies show that blood THC over 2 ng/mL does do not necessarily indicate recent cannabis use in frequent cannabis users. Five studies reported blood THC >2 ng/mL (or plasma THC >3 ng/mL) in some participants after six days of abstinence and two reported participants with blood THC >5 ng/mL (or plasma THC > 7.5 ng/mL) after a day of abstinence.

 

Conclusions: 

Blood THC >2 ng/mL, and possibly even THC >5 ng/mL, does not necessarily represent recent use of cannabis in frequent cannabis users.

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