LGC leads first international CBD ring trial

The trial demonstrates the capability of laboratories to measure cannabidiol and controlled cannabinoids in consumer products

13 Jul 2021
Diane Li
Assistant Editor

The Government Chemist team, hosted at LGC, has published the results of a recent international ring trial on the determination of cannabidiol (CBD) - an uncontrolled cannabinoid- and controlled cannabinoids in consumer products such as food and cosmetics.

Consumer CBD products have entered the UK market rapidly in a variety of forms, including food and cosmetics. CBD when used as an ingredient in food or cosmetic products must currently be free from controlled cannabinoids. This ring trial supports work underway to introduce an acceptable trace level of controlled cannabinoid content in consumer CBD products, to protect legitimate businesses and consumers from fraudulent or unsafe products. To ensure this, it is essential that laboratories are able to measure accurately the content of CBD and controlled cannabinoids in retail products.

This ring trial was a jointly funded initiative by the Office for Product Safety & Standards (OPSS) within the Department for Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy (BEIS), the Food Standards Agency (FSA) and the Home Office, and carried out in collaboration with Food Standards Scotland (FSS) and the Defence Science and Technology Laboratory (DSTL), and included 35 laboratories. Participating laboratories used either methods developed through the Government Chemist programme or their own in-house methods to analyse reference samples provided.

The study showed good agreement between most laboratories (82%), demonstrating their capability to determine CBD in consumer products successfully. In addition, laboratories demonstrated the ability to detect controlled cannabinoids in the consumer products. In doing so, the ring trial contributes to global efforts to keep unsafe products off the market and aid consumer protection.

The Government Chemist, Dr Julian Braybrook, commented, “As my public remit covers advice to UK government and other affected parties on the role of analytical measurement in effective policy, standards and regulations, I am delighted that we have been able to work across government to conduct an international ring trial on CBD and controlled cannabinoids in consumer products, an area of high interest worldwide.

It is gratifying to see that the methods developed in the Government Chemist Programme have performed well, contributing both to demonstration of UK measurement capability in support of regulation of novel foods and cosmetic products and as important evidence for the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs’ call on the performance of methods for the determination controlled cannabinoids in commercial CBD products.”

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