Posters & Presentations

Analysis of Δ-8-THC, Δ-9-THC, and Their Metabolites in Whole Blood by LC-MS/MS

22 Jan 2026

The testing of whole blood samples for tetrahydrocannabinol (Δ-9-THC) consumption is routine and has been around for many decades. Δ-9-THC is metabolized into 11-Hydroxy-Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol (11-OH-Δ-9-THC) and further into 11-nor-9-carboxy-Δ-9-THC (Δ-9-THC-COOH). It is important to test for the parent and both metabolites to properly monitor for THC usage.

As more isomers of Δ-9-THC become available on the market, testing becomes more complicated and novel methods are needed to achieve isomeric resolution. One such isomer, Δ-8-THC, is federally unregulated in the United States and readily available for purchase in many stores. This compound forms its own hydroxylated and carboxylated metabolites, (11-OH-Δ-8-THC and Δ-8-THC-COOH), that must be chromatographically resolved from their isomeric metabolites. The resolution of isomeric metabolites is key in reporting accurate specimen findings and poor resolution, especially when one isomer is in much greater abundance than the other, can result in quantitation issues and invalid data.

In this study, an LC-MS/MS method was successfully developed for reliable and accurate testing of Δ-8/9-THC isomers and isomer metabolites in whole blood. The method was determined to be quick, rugged, and sensitive enough to meet reporting guidelines for clinical and forensic toxicology laboratories. While C18 phase columns may show some selectivity for the three isomer pairs, full resolution of the isomers is needed for accurate quantitation. To achieve this resolution on a C18 phase would likely result in a lengthy analytical runtime. The FluoroPhenyl ligand shows selectivity for all three isomer pairs, allowing for adequate separation of the analytes in a reasonable analytical runtime.

Authors

  • Haley Berkland, MS

    Haley is an LC applications scientist at Restek. She attended Duquesne University, receiving her bachelor's degree in biochemistry and a master's degree in forensic science and law. As a graduate student, she performed research on the detection of drugs of abuse in vitreous humor by LC-MS/MS. Before joining Restek in 2023, Haley spent four years working as a forensic toxicologist. While in this role, she performed analysis of postmortem toxicology casework, identification of seized drug evidence, and development/validation of new assays by LC-MS/MS, GC-MS, and GC-FID.

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  • Jamie York, PhD

    Jamie York is a scientist in the Applications Lab at Restek Corporation in the LC Solutions department, where she works on the development of novel applications for the food, clinical, and cannabis markets. She earned her PhD in chemistry from The University of Texas at Arlington in 2019. There, she mastered many analytical techniques including gas chromatography–vacuum ultraviolet; gas chromatography–mass spectrometry; matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization; and liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry with a focus on food and environmental research. Jamie continued her post-doctoral work at The University of Texas at Arlington with a focus on the analysis of mammalian cell culture media by LC-MS/MS.

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