EtG

Ethyl Glucuronide

Other

What is Ethyl Glucuronide?

Ethyl glucuronide (EtG) is a direct, non-oxidative metabolite of ethanol (alcohol) formed through conjugation with glucuronic acid by the enzyme UDP-glucuronosyltransferase in the liver. Unlike ethanol itself, which is rapidly metabolized and eliminated from the body within hours, EtG persists in urine, blood, and hair for significantly longer periods, making it a sensitive biomarker of recent alcohol consumption. Only approximately 0.02–0.06% of ingested ethanol is converted to EtG, but modern immunoassay and mass spectrometry techniques can detect these trace amounts with high sensitivity.

In urine, EtG can be detected for approximately 24–80 hours after alcohol consumption, depending on the amount consumed and individual metabolism. In hair, EtG can be detected for months, providing a long-term record of alcohol use. Blood EtG has a shorter detection window (up to 36 hours). EtG is frequently paired with ethyl sulfate (EtS), another minor ethanol metabolite, for confirmation and to reduce the risk of false positives. Together, these markers have become cornerstone tools in alcohol monitoring programs, forensic toxicology, liver transplant evaluations, and substance abuse treatment compliance.

Why It Matters

EtG extends the window for detecting alcohol consumption far beyond what standard blood alcohol concentration (BAC) or breathalyzer tests can achieve. While ethanol is eliminated from the body within 6–12 hours of moderate drinking, EtG remains detectable for up to 80 hours in urine. This makes EtG invaluable for monitoring alcohol abstinence in clinical programs (substance abuse treatment, liver transplant candidacy, professional monitoring for physicians or pilots) and legal settings (probation, DUI programs, child custody cases). EtG is also highly sensitive—it can detect consumption of even small amounts of alcohol that would not produce intoxication or a positive BAC.

Normal Reference Ranges

GroupRangeUnit
Negative (no recent alcohol)<100ng/mL (urine)
Low positive (incidental exposure)100–500ng/mL (urine)
High positive (recent drinking)>500ng/mL (urine)
Very high (heavy recent drinking)>1,000ng/mL (urine)

Reference ranges may vary by laboratory. Always compare results to the ranges provided by your testing facility.

What High EtG Levels Mean

Common Causes

  • Recent alcohol consumption (primary cause)
  • Heavy or binge drinking (very high levels)
  • Incidental alcohol exposure (hand sanitizers, mouthwash, kombucha—low levels)
  • Some medications containing ethanol
  • Cooking with alcohol (minimal, typically below cutoff)
  • In-vitro formation in specimens with high glucose and bacteria (rare, improper storage)

Possible Symptoms

  • No symptoms from EtG itself—it is a metabolic byproduct
  • Symptoms of alcohol consumption may or may not be present at the time of testing
  • May detect alcohol use in the absence of any intoxication signs

What to do: A positive EtG result should be interpreted in context. Levels above 500 ng/mL strongly suggest intentional alcohol consumption. Levels between 100–500 ng/mL may reflect incidental exposure (hand sanitizer, mouthwash) or light drinking. Confirm with EtS testing to rule out false positives from bacterial contamination. In clinical monitoring programs, a positive result should trigger clinical assessment and discussion rather than automatic punitive action. Consider the clinical context, self-reported history, and whether incidental exposure sources are plausible.

What Low EtG Levels Mean

Common Causes

  • No recent alcohol consumption
  • Alcohol consumption more than 80 hours prior
  • Very minimal alcohol exposure below detection threshold

Possible Symptoms

  • No symptoms—a negative result confirms no recent alcohol exposure

What to do: A negative EtG result in urine confirms no significant alcohol exposure in the preceding 2–3 days. In monitoring programs, this supports compliance with abstinence requirements. Continue regular testing as scheduled.

When Is EtG Testing Recommended?

  • In alcohol abstinence monitoring programs
  • Before and after liver transplantation
  • In substance abuse treatment programs
  • For workplace or professional licensing alcohol monitoring
  • In legal settings (probation, custody evaluations)
  • When covert alcohol use is suspected in patients with liver disease

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes, extensive or repeated use of alcohol-based hand sanitizers can cause low-level positive EtG results. Hand sanitizers typically contain 60–70% ethanol, and some alcohol can be absorbed through the skin or inhaled. Studies have shown that frequent use (10+ applications over several hours) can produce EtG levels in the 100–500 ng/mL range. However, levels above 500 ng/mL from hand sanitizer alone are rare without extremely heavy use. This is why many monitoring programs use a cutoff of 500 ng/mL rather than 100 ng/mL to distinguish intentional drinking from incidental exposure, and confirm with EtS testing.
The detection window depends on the amount consumed and individual metabolism. In urine: after moderate drinking (3–4 drinks), EtG is typically detectable for 24–48 hours; after heavy drinking, it can be detected for 48–80 hours. In blood: EtG is detectable for up to 36 hours. In hair: EtG can be detected for months, with each centimeter of hair representing approximately one month of history. The urine detection window makes EtG far superior to BAC testing (which only detects alcohol for 6–12 hours) for monitoring abstinence between scheduled appointments.
Traditional alcohol tests—breathalyzer, blood alcohol concentration (BAC), and saliva tests—detect ethanol itself, which the body eliminates rapidly (average rate of 0.015–0.020% BAC per hour). These tests only detect very recent alcohol use (within hours). EtG detects a metabolite that persists much longer (days in urine, months in hair), extending the detection window dramatically. Additionally, indirect markers like GGT and MCV reflect chronic heavy alcohol use over weeks to months but are not specific to alcohol. EtG is both specific (direct metabolite of ethanol) and has an intermediate detection window that bridges the gap between acute and chronic markers.

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Medical Disclaimer: This information is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Reference ranges may vary between laboratories. Always consult your healthcare provider for interpretation of your specific test results.

Disclaimer: SymptomGPT is not a medical diagnosis tool and does not provide medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional. If you are experiencing a medical emergency, call 911 immediately.