Biomarkers of Gamma-Hydroxybutyric Acid (GHB) Exposure: A Comprehensive Review of Analytical and Forensic Advances
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results and Discussion
4. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
2,4-OH-BA | 2,4-dihydroxybutyric acid |
2-HG | 2-hydroxyglutaric acid |
3,4-OH-BA | 3,4-dihydroxybutyric acid |
4 HPA | 4-hydroxyphenylacetic acid |
ACN | Acetonitrile |
AA | Adipic acid |
BHB | Beta-hydroxybutyric acid |
BSTFA | N,O-bis(triméthylsilyl)trifluoroacétamide |
DFSA | Drug-facilitated Sexual Assaults |
GABA | Gamma-aminobutyric acid |
GBA | 4-Guanidinobutyric acid |
GHB | Gamma-hydroxybutyric |
GHB-GLU | GHB-glucuronide |
GHB-SUL | GHB sulfate |
GA | Glycolic acid |
GC-MS | Gas chromatography–mass spectrometry |
LOQ | Limit of quantification |
LLE | Liquid–liquid extraction |
LC-HRMS | Liquid chromatography–high-resolution mass spectrometry |
LC-MS/MS | Liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry |
N | Populations studied |
PAs | Urinary polyamines |
P-GHB | Phosphatidyl-GHB |
SA | Succinic acid |
TCA | Tricarboxylic acid |
UHPLC-HRMS | Ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography high-resolution–high-resolution mass spectrometry |
References
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Reference | Objectives | Populations Studied (n) | Matrix | Key Findings |
---|---|---|---|---|
Animal study (Sprague-Dawley rats) | ||||
Seo et al., 2016 [7] | Study the profile of organic acids (OAs), including those bound to the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle, as well as GHB and 2-hydroxyglutaric acid (2-HG), in rat urine samples following the intraperitoneal injection of GHB. | Control group (n = 6): urine collected before GHB injection. Group 1 (n = 6): single intraperitoneal administration (2.6 g/kg), urine was collected on the 2nd day. Group 2 (n = 6): multiple intraperitoneal administrations, urine collected on the 11th day. after first administration (2.6 g/kg/day). Six animals were used in the experimental part, each animal being its own control. | Urine | In group 1 and 2, ketoglutaric acid was the most abundant, followed by citric and isocitric acids among the 18 AOs quantified (LOD = 0.01–55.4 ng/mL). An analysis of variance test revealed a significant difference between the control group and the other two groups in 15 AOs (p < 0.05): 2-hydroxybutyric acid, 2-hydroxyglutaric acid, acetoacetic acid, alpha-ketoglutaric acid, cis-aconitic acid, citric acid, fumaric acid, glycolic acid, isocitric acid, lactic acid, malic acid, malonic acid, oxaloacetic acid, pyruvic acid, succinic acid. The metabolic disruption of AOs after single administration is greater than after multiple administration. |
Seo et al., 2018 [8] | Determine the urinary amino acids (AA) profile in rat urine samples after intraperitoneal injection of GHB. | N = 25 Injection of 600 mg/kg GHB Control group: urine collected before injection. Group 1: single administration, collection 12 h after single administration. Group 2: multiple administrations, collection 10 days after daily administration. | Urine | Among a total of 28 AA analyzed (limit of detection from 0.01 to 8.47 ng and limit of quantification from 0.01 to 14.51 ng), significant differences were observed in the levels of 26 AA between the control, single and multiple administration groups: α-aminoadipic acid, α-aminobutyric acid, alanine, aspartic acid, asparagine, β-aminoisobutyric acid, glycine, glutamic acid, glutamine, homocysteine, histidine, isoleucine, lysine, leucine, methionine, N-methyl-DL-aspartic acid, ornithine, phenylalanine, pipecolic acid, proline, pyroglutamic acid, serine, threonine, tryptophan, tyrosine, valine, γ-aminobutyric acid, 4-hydroxyproline. Levels of GABA were significantly different between the control group compared with the single administration group, but not with the multiple administration group. |
Lee et al., 2019 [9] | Determine the urinary polyamines (PAs) profile in rat urine samples after intraperitoneal injection of GHB. | N = 6 Injection of 600 mg/kg GHB Control group: urine collected before injection. Group 1: single administration, collection at the second day after single administration. Group 2: multiple administrations, collection 11 days after daily administration. | Urine | There were significant differences in the levels of N1-acetylspermine, putrescine, N1-acetylspermidine, and spermine between the control group and group 1 (p = 0.001, p = 0.006, p = 0.009 and p = 0.027, respectively). In the group receiving multiple administrations, the levels of N1-acetylspermine and spermine increased significantly, by 171% and 70%, respectively, compared to the control group. Meanwhile, the levels of N1-acetylspermidine and putrescine decreased significantly, by 35% and 22%, respectively. N1-acetylspermine was identified as the main polyamine that could be used to discriminate between the control group and the single-dose and multiple-dose GHB groups. Similar levels of spermine were observed in the single-dose and multiple-dose groups. Combined with N1-acetylspermine, this makes spermine a potential biomarker for GHB exposure and dependence. |
Kim et al., 2025 [6] | Identify new biomarkers of gamma-hydroxybutyrate (GHB) intoxication by analyzing urinary metabolic alterations in rats with a targeted and untargeted metabolomic approach | N = 20 Injection of 600 mg/kg GHB For both targeted and non-targeted metabolomic analyses: Control group: N = 6 Test group: N = 5 Urine was collected over 12 h. For assessing the GHB detection window: Control group: N = 5 Test group: N = 4 Urine samples were collected every 3 h for 24 h. | Urine | Targeted metabolomics: Urinary concentrations of GHB and its metabolites (GABA (LOD = 0.01 µg/mL), glutamic acid (LOD = 0.06 µg/mL), succinic acid (LOD = 0.3 µg/mL), 2,4-OH-BA (LOD = 0.24 µg/mL), 3,4-OH-BA (LOD = 0.21 µg/mL), and glycolic acid (LOD = 3 µg/mL)) were significantly increased following a 600 mg/kg GHB administration in rats over a 12-h period. Creatinine-adjusted concentrations showed substantial fold changes in the GHB group compared to controls: 2,4-OH-BA (16.2-fold), glutamic acid (13.9-fold), 3,4-OH-BA (12.0-fold), GABA (11.7-fold), succinic acid (6.5-fold), and glycolic acid (2.8-fold). 4-Guanidinobutyric acid (GBA) was identified as a novel biomarker for GHB intoxication. Urinary GBA levels peaked at 3 h post-administration before declining, following a similar pattern to GHB and other metabolites. GBA levels in the GHB group were significantly higher than controls, with creatinine-adjusted concentrations of 73.0 ± 16.2 µg/mg creatinine at 9 h, compared to 39.0 ± 11.2 µg/mg creatinine in the control group (p < 0.01). Untargeted metabolomics: Significantly elevated metabolites in the GHB group, including GBA, xanthurenic acid, riboflavin, pyridoxine, indole-3-acetate, hippurate, thymidine, N-acetyl-L-leucine, azelaic acid, 4-pyridoxate, 4-hydroxybenzoate, 4-coumarate, and GHB, were identified and confirmed by MS/MS spectral matching. |
Human study | ||||
Petersen et al., 2013 [10] | Detect GHB-glucuronide in human urine samples (GHB-GLU). | N = 50 Samples were drawn from healthy volunteers. | Urine | GHB was below the LOQ (<0.5 μg/mL) in all samples (n = 50) (LOD = 0.025 mg/mL). GHB-GLU was detected in all samples, mean concentration = 1.3 µg/mL (n = 47), three samples were below the limit of quantification (0.5 µg/mL). |
Hanish et al., 2015 [11] | Detect GHB-sulfate (GHB-SUL) in urine samples from patients using GHB or its precursors. | N1: GHB-positive urines between 70 and 170 μg/mL (n = 5). N2: GHB-negative urines (n = 5). | Urine | N2: GHB-SUL not detected in 4/5 samples. N1: GHB-SUL detected concomitantly with GHB in 5/5 samples. No quantification of GHB-SUL was performed in this study. |
Piper et al., 2017 [12] | Evaluation of GHB-SUL and GHB-GLU metabolites in different populations to extend the GHB detection window. | N1 = 100 male and female athlete urine samples. N2 = 50 urine samples from students. N3 = 3 volunteers’ urine after administration of 1.86 g of GHB orally; urine was collected 72 h later. | Urine | No significative difference was found between N1 and N2 for GHB-GLU and GHB-SUL (p < 0.05) (LODs < 10 ng/mL covering a linear range up to 1 mg/mL (GHB_SULF) and 20 mg/mL (GHB_GLUC)). There was no significant difference between the male and female populations, and no difference between athletes and non-athletes. There was no significant difference between N3 and N1 or N2. These two biomarkers are not suitable for extending the detection window. |
Palomino-Schätzlein et al., 2017 [13] | Suitability of NMR spectroscopy for the monitoring of exogenous GHB in body fluids, and interest in metabolomics. | N = 12 (6 male/6 female). Single dose of 25 mg/kg GHB administered orally. Urine collected at T10min, T1h, T2h, T4h, T6h, T14h, T20h, T24h and T30h. Blood collection at T10min, T1h and T13h. | Urine and serum | This study confirmed the feasibility of NMR spectroscopy for measuring exogenous GHB in body fluids such as urine and serum, as well as the value of the NMR-based metabolomics approach for biomarker research. The study highlighted a significant increase in the concentration of glycolate and succinate in urine after GHB ingestion. Glycolate present a longer detection window compared to GHB and succinate. |
Steuer et al., 2019 [14] | To identify possible new biomarkers of GHB consumption by evaluating urine samples obtained in a randomized, placebo-controlled crossover study. N = 20 male volunteers received 50 mg/kg sodium oxybate (Xyrem®) at night, in the middle of a sleep episode. | N1 = 10 healthy volunteers, GHB administration, 42 mg/kg orally. N2 = 20 placebo healthy volunteers, placebo administration. All samples were collected at T4.5h. | Urine | GHB significantly increased in N1 (p < 0.05). GHB-GLU and GHB-SUL were detected in N1 and N2, but no significant difference was observed between the two groups. GHB-carnitine, GHB-glutamate, and GHB-glycine were present in all N1 samples. Glycolic acid and succinylcarnitine were present in N1 and N2 but significantly increased in N1. GHB can be catabolized to acetyl-CoA and glycolate by β-oxidation and converted to 3-hydroxypropionyl-CoA by α-oxidation. |
Steuer et al., 2021 [15] | Identify new biomarkers of GHB using metabolic profiling in serum and urine samples collected in a placebo-controlled crossover study in healthy men. | N1 = 10 GHB administration, 42 mg/kg orally. Serum collected at T0, T4, and T16.5h. Urine at T4.5h and T8h. N2 = 10 (placebo) Serum collected at T0, T4, and T16.5h. Urine at T4.5h and T8h. N3 = 15 (administration of 42 mg/kg GHB orally Urine collected at T8h. | Urine and serum | Urine T4.5h: significant increase in GHB-glutamate, GHB-glycine, GHB-taurine, GHB-carnitine, succinylcarnitine, glycolic acid conjugate with the amino acid taurine. Urine T8h: decrease in all compounds. The results suggest that GHB-pentose and a glycolic acid conjugate are the most promising metabolites. Serum: only dihydroxybutyric acid and 2-methylbutyroxylcarnitine appear to be affected by GHB intake. With the exception of traces of GHB-glycine, none of the above-mentioned urinary biomarkers could be detected. The concentration of unidentified compounds (M259T82, M507T82) decreases very little between the T4.5h and T8h urine samples. |
Jarsiah et al., 2021 [16] | Evaluation of glycolic acid, succinic acid, 3,4-dihydroxybutyric acid, and 2,4-dihydroxybutyric acid as biomarkers to extend the GHB window detection. | N = 17 patients positive for GHB (10 serum samples and 7 urine samples). Threshold values: >4 µg /mL in serum or > 10 µg/mL in urine. N = 40 alleged cases of drug-facilitated sexual assault (DFSA) with negative GHB results (21 serum and 19 urine samples). | Urine and serum | In all serum samples positive for GHB, glycolic acid (GA), 3,4-dihydroxybutyric acid (3,4-OH-BA), and 2,4-dihydroxybutyric acid (2,4-OH-BA) were higher in comparison with the population of alleged cases of DFSA. 5/7 GHB positive urine samples presented increased concentrations of GA, 3,4-OH-BA, and 2,4-OH-BA. 2/7 did not present an increase, this was associated to GHB concentrations close to the positivity threshold (>10 µg/mL). Among GHB-negative serum samples, 6 showed increased concentrations of GA, 3,4-OH-BA, and 2,4-OH-BA suggesting an intake of GHB or its precursors. Serum analysis is more reliable than urine analysis. Thresholds were recommended for interpreting potential cases of ante mortem GHB intoxication:
In this study, the limits of detection were 0.12 mg/L for 2,4-OH-BA butyric acid, 0.13 mg/L for 3,4-OH-BA, 0.03 mg/L for GHB, 0.28 mg/L for SA, and 0.19 mg/L for GA, respectively. Limits of quantification were 0.39 mg/L for 2,4-OH-BA, 0.42 mg/L for 3,4-OH-BA, 0.11 mg/L for GHB, 0.98 mg/L for SA, and 0.63 mg/L for GA. |
Küting et al., 2021 [17] | Detect GHB administration via detection elevated concentrations of 6 organic acids (adipic acid (AA), 4-hydroxyphenylacetic acid (4-HPA), glycolic acid (GA), succinic acid (SA), 3,4-dihydroxybutyric acid (3,4-DHB), and 2,4 dihydroxybutyric acid (2,4-DHB) in plasma and urine. | N = 5 samples were collected from narcolepsy patients treated with either Xyrem® (Patients 1, 2, 4, 5) or Somsanit® (Patient 3). | Plasma and urine | Concentration curves for adipic acid (AA), 4-hydroxyphenylacetic acid (4-HPA), glycolic acid (GA), and succinic acid (SA) in plasma showed no clear increase or decrease within 12 h of GHB ingestion. Similar results were observed for AA, 4-HPA, and SA in urine. Following the administration of GHB, the concentrations of 3,4-DHB and 2,4-DHB in plasma increased. However, the increase in 2,4-DHB concentration was much lower than that in 3,4-DHB. Following GHB administration, an increase in the concentration of 3,4-DHB, 2,4-DHB and GA was observed in urine. Baseline concentrations (standardized to creatinine) were found at:
In this study, the LODs were: GA = 0.23 μg/mL; GHB = 0.05 μg/mL; SA = 0.08 μg/mL; 2,4-DHB = 0.07 μg/mL; 3,4-DHB = 0.06 μg/mL; AA = 0.07 μg/mL; 4-HPAA = 0.07 μg/mL. |
Wang et al., 2022 [18] | Investigate a range of advanced analytical methods to discover those best suited to detect new and known direct biomarkers/adducts of GHB consumption in routine UHPLC-HRMS screening data. | N1 = 51 blood tests positive for GHB (>10 µg/mL). N2 = 51 blood tests negative for GHB (<10 µg/mL). Various other drugs were found in both groups. | Whole blood | GHB-carnitine was always detected in N1. Succinylcarnitine improves the specificity of GHB-carnitine for the detection of GHB exposure. M259T82, M507T82, and GABA-2-hydroxyglutarate are potential biomarkers of GHB exposure. Using statistical models, the authors distinguished suspected GHB users from non-users with an accuracy of over 80%. |
Thimm et al., 2022 [19] | Analytical characterization of phosphatidyl-GHB (P-GHB) and its isomer beta-hydroxybutyric acid (BHB). | Phosphatidyl-GHB and phosphatidyl-BHB were synthetized in vitro, to be then characterized in human whole blood. | Whole blood | P-GHB and P-BHB were successfully synthetized. In vitro, phospholipase D forms P-GHB, making it a potential biomarker for GHB. The study remains very basic. Research in animals and then in humans could be relevant if P-GHB is to become a real candidate. These experiments clearly support our hypothesis that P-GHB is formed by Phospholipase D and might be suitable as a GHB biomarker. For both compounds, the limit of detection established was LOD ≤ 2 ng/mL. |
Kim et al., 2022 [20] | Determine the reference concentrations of metabolites that could be used as biomarkers for GHB intoxication. | N = 472 samples from 206 healthy women. | Urine | With advancing age, the creatinine-adjusted concentrations of glutamic acid and succinic acid, as well as succinylcarnitine, significantly increased, whereas the concentration of glycolic acid significantly decreased. The concentrations of GHB, both unadjusted and creatinine-adjusted, were unaffected by differences in age. Significant variation in GABA (LOD = 0.01 µg/mL) concentration was observed between days, as well as significant intra-day variation in the concentrations of 3,4-dihydroxybutyric acid (LOD = 0.21 µg/mL) and succinylcarnitine. The maximum concentration of endogenous GHB detected in urine was 0.75 μg/mL (LOD = 0.17 µg/mL), which is much lower than that previously reported. The strong correlation between the concentrations of 2,4-OH-BA (LOD = 0.24 µg/mL) or 3,4-OH-BA and those of GHB strongly suggests that they could be used as direct markers of GHB intoxication. Although succinic acid (LOD = 0.3 µg/mL) is also correlated, its role in pathological conditions such as inflammation and tumor formation has been emphasized. Therefore, it appears to be unsuitable as a distinct marker for GHB intoxication. |
Steuer et al., 2023 [21] | Quantitative characterization of urinary excretion of GHB, GHB-carnitine, GHB-glycine, GHB-glutamate, GHB-taurine, GHB-phenylalanine, GHB-fatty acid esters, and organic acids 2,4-OH-BA, 3,4-OH-BA, GA, SA, and succinylcarnitine after controlled administration of GHB to humans and to evaluate their usefulness for prolonged detection of GHB intake by applying three different discrimination strategies. | Cohort 1 (from 8 years ago): N1 = 10: administration of 42 mg/kg GHB N2 = 10: administration of placebo Urine collected at T4.5h and T8h. Cohort 2 (from 6 month ago): N1 = 40: administration of 42 mg/kg GHB N2 = 40: administration of placebo Urine at T4.5h, T8h, T11h, and T28h. | Urine | GHB-glycine can prolong the detection window of GHB to about 28 h. However, the sensitivity is still lower than that targeted by the authors, which is close to 1. Among all evaluated biomarkers, only GHB-pentose concentrations were below the limit of quantification of 0.05 μg/mL in all placebo samples. GHB fatty acid conjugates could not be detected in any treatment condition. The authors found that endogenous concentrations of GHB and GHB metabolites (placebo) were independent of daytime, with the exception of GHB-glucuronide and succinylcarnitine, which showed significantly lower concentrations in the afternoon. The limit of quantification for all GHB conjugates was 0.05 μg/mL. |
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Voisin, A.; Solas-Chesneau, C.; Pélissier-Alicot, A.-L.; Fabresse, N. Biomarkers of Gamma-Hydroxybutyric Acid (GHB) Exposure: A Comprehensive Review of Analytical and Forensic Advances. Toxics 2025, 13, 824. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics13100824
Voisin A, Solas-Chesneau C, Pélissier-Alicot A-L, Fabresse N. Biomarkers of Gamma-Hydroxybutyric Acid (GHB) Exposure: A Comprehensive Review of Analytical and Forensic Advances. Toxics. 2025; 13(10):824. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics13100824
Chicago/Turabian StyleVoisin, Alice, Caroline Solas-Chesneau, Anne-Laure Pélissier-Alicot, and Nicolas Fabresse. 2025. "Biomarkers of Gamma-Hydroxybutyric Acid (GHB) Exposure: A Comprehensive Review of Analytical and Forensic Advances" Toxics 13, no. 10: 824. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics13100824
APA StyleVoisin, A., Solas-Chesneau, C., Pélissier-Alicot, A.-L., & Fabresse, N. (2025). Biomarkers of Gamma-Hydroxybutyric Acid (GHB) Exposure: A Comprehensive Review of Analytical and Forensic Advances. Toxics, 13(10), 824. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics13100824