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Illegally Manufactured Fentanyl Linked to Rise in Overdoses

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http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/867986

The increasing distribution of illicitly manufactured fentanyl (IMF) across the United States, and the sharp rise in overdose deaths linked to this drug, are causing more concern about a growing threat to public health and safety.

According to a report published online August 25 in Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR), the number of drug products obtained by law enforcement that tested positive for fentanyl (fentanyl submissions) increased by 426% from 2013 through 2014. Deaths related to synthetic opioids (excluding methadone) increased by 79% during that period.

"An urgent, collaborative public health and law enforcement response is needed to address the increasing problem of IMF and fentanyl deaths," said the report's authors, led by R. Matthew Gladden, PhD, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

Pharmaceutical fentanyl, a synthetic opioid 50 to 100 times more potent than morphine, is approved for the management of surgical/postoperative pain, severe chronic pain, and breakthrough cancer pain. IMF, which is unlawfully produced fentanyl obtained through illicit drug markets, is commonly mixed with or sold as white powder heroin.

Starting in 2013, the production and distribution of IMF increased to unprecedented levels. In 2015, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and the CDC issued nationwide alerts identifying increases in fentanyl-related overdose deaths in multiple states.

The current report documents changes in synthetic opioid–related overdose deaths among 27 states where death certificates consistently report drugs involved in overdoses. These changes were highly correlated with fentanyl submissions, but not with fentanyl prescribing, which remained relatively stable.

The report identified eight states where increases in fentanyl submissions and synthetic opioid deaths were primarily concentrated. In these "high-burden" states, the synthetic opioid crude death rate increased 174%, and the rate of reported fentanyl submissions increased by 1000%.

These high-burden states were located in the Northeast (Massachusetts, Maine, and New Hampshire), the Midwest (Ohio), and the South (Florida, Kentucky, Maryland, and North Carolina). Increases in synthetic opioid deaths in high-burden states disproportionately involved non-Hispanic white men aged 25 to 44 years.

The strong correlation between increases in fentanyl submissions, primarily driven by IMF, increases in synthetic opioid deaths, mostly related to fentanyl, and uncorrelated stable fentanyl prescriptions rates supports the hypothesis that IMF is driving the increases in fentanyl deaths, according to the report's authors.

"The high potency of fentanyl and the possibility of rapid death after fentanyl administration, coupled with the extremely sharp 1-year increase in fentanyl deaths in high-burden states, highlights the need to understand the factors driving this increase," the authors write.

The authors note a number of limitations to their findings. One is that because synthetic opioid deaths include those involving drugs other than fentanyl, the absolute number of synthetic opioid deaths should be considered "a proxy" for the number of fentanyl deaths.

Also, whereas drug submissions vary over time and from region to region, the findings are restricted to 27 states, and testing for fentanyl deaths might vary across jurisdictions.

Ohio and Florida

Data on fentanyl-related overdose deaths in Ohio and Florida further suggest that the problem of IMF is rapidly expanding, according to a second report also published in the current issue of MMWR. The study highlights a sharp increase in fentanyl deaths between 2013 and 2015 in these two states that parallels an increase in fentanyl submissions.

The study was carried out by the University of Florida and the Ohio Department of Public Health, in collaboration with the CDC, and was written by Alexis B. Peterson, PhD, Epidemic Intelligence Service and the National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, CDC, and colleagues.

Investigators found that from 2013 to 2014, fentanyl submissions increased 494% in Florida and 1043% in Ohio. This, they note, was "concurrent" with a 115% increase in fentanyl deaths in Florida and a 526% increase in Ohio. They also saw a "sharp increase" in fentanyl submissions and fentanyl deaths in Florida from December 2014 to February 2015.

In contrast, fentanyl prescription rates (per 1000 population) for the full year (2013-2014) increased only 5% in Florida and declined 7% in Ohio.

Death Demographics

Dr Peterson and colleagues note that the demographics of fentanyl-related deaths now "mirror" those of people dying from heroin overdose. For example, in Florida, fentanyl deaths increased almost 2.5 times faster among men (163%) than women (68%), with the most rapidly increasing rate among those aged 14 to 34 years. In contrast, US death rates involving prescription opioids are highest in an older group, those aged 45 to 54 years.

Researchers also uncovered evidence that the percentage of fentanyl deaths in which the victim tested positive for other illicit substances, such as cocaine and heroin, increased significantly over the study period.

In Ohio, factors associated with fentanyl deaths included a current diagnosis of a mental health disorder and a recent release from an institution, such as jail, a rehabilitation facility, or a hospital.

"Persons recently released from an institution are at particularly high risk for opioid overdose because of lowered opioid tolerance resulting from abstinence during residential treatment or incarceration," they write. "Interventions such as provision of naloxone and continuation of medication-assisted treatment after release have been shown to be effective for this group."

Increased naloxone access is "critical" given fentanyl's potency and the possibility of its causing rapid death, they add.

Their findings, the authors say, suggest that the surge in fentanyl deaths in Florida and Ohio is closely related to increases in the local IMF supply as opposed to diverted pharmaceutical fentanyl.

"Distinguishing whether an overdose involves IMF or [pharmaceutical fentanyl] is critical for targeted interventions because overdose risk profiles differ."

Warning System

The relationship between fentanyl deaths and fentanyl submissions suggests that law enforcement testing data on drug cases could act as an "early warning system" to identify changes in the illicit drug supply, the authors write.

Multidisciplinary strategies from public health agencies, harm reduction communities, emergency medical services, law enforcement, and treatment services for substance use disorders might have the greatest impact on public health, given the close relationship between fentanyl mortality and confiscation of IMF, they continue.

The report pertaining to Florida and Ohio also had limitations, many of them similar to those of the first report. Among those cited was the underestimation of the numbers and rates of fentanyl deaths, as not all overdose deaths were tested for fentanyl.

August 31 is International Overdose Awareness Day, an event that aims to raise awareness globally that deaths from overdoses are preventable.
 
August 31 is International Overdose Awareness Day, a global event that aims to raise awareness that overdose death is preventable. Goals include providing awareness regarding the risk for overdose, providing information on community services, and preventing and reducing drug-related harm by supporting evidence-based policy and practice (http://www.overdoseday.com).

In 2015, the Drug Enforcement Administration and CDC released alerts identifying illicitly manufactured fentanyl as a threat to public health and safety (1,2). Although fentanyl is available as a prescription medication for treating severe pain, including cancer-related pain, the current epidemic of synthetic opioid–involved overdose deaths largely involves illicitly manufactured fentanyl that is mixed with or sold as heroin (1,3).

In contrast to the 2005–2007 fentanyl overdose outbreak, when deaths were confined to several states, the current epidemic is unprecedented in scope and, as described in a report in this issue ofMMWR, multiple states in several regions of the United States are reporting substantial increases in fatal synthetic opioid–involved overdoses, primarily driven by fentanyl-involved overdose deaths. Further information and data about fentanyl from CDC are available at http://www.cdc.gov/drugoverdose/opioids/fentanyl.html.
 
http://www.cnn.com/2016/08/17/health/west-virginia-city-has-27-heroin-overdoses-in-4-hours/

Huntington, West Virginia has 27 heroin overdoses in 4 hours

There were 27 heroin overdoses within four hours, including one death, in Huntington, West Virginia, on Monday. Officials believe the drug may be laced with something to make it particularly dangerous.

"I do not know what it was laced with, but I would love to know at this point," Cabell County EMS Director Gordon Merry said.

There is some hope that the death can lead to some clues about what may be making the drugs so dangerous. Huntington Chief of Police Joe Ciccarelli said. "The state medical examiner will conduct a toxicology analysis to determine what was in the drug, but that will not come back for about 10 weeks. We did not seize any heroin from the other overdose victims, so we can't analyze theirs."

'Like a mass casualty event'
The calls started coming Monday afternoon, overwhelming the 911 call center and taxing ambulance resources in the area, according to Merry.

"We had tied up seven ambulances within minutes due to overdose calls and still needed more, which we had to get from other parts of the county. It was basically like a mass casualty event," said Merry.

"Huntington has a population of about 50,000 people and usually sees around 18 to 20 overdoses in a week. So this was a huge increase, catastrophic," he added.

All of the overdoses happened within a mile and a half radius, which leads officials to believe they are from the same batch of heroin. The overdose victims ranged from 20 years old to 50, according to Merry.

Eight people were revived using naloxone, an opioid-reversing drug. Others were revived by manual resuscitation, with a bag that simulates breathing. One of the victims had to be given naloxone three times because the heroin and whatever it was laced with was so strong, according to Merry.

Overdoses on the rise
Huntington is in Cabell County, where there have been at least 440 overdoses this year. Twenty-six of those were fatal, said Scott Lemley, an investigator with the Huntington Police department.

There were 413 overdoses countywide during the same period last year. But there were 35 deaths in the county over the first half of last year, so there's been a 26% decrease, according to Lemley.

Fentanyl, an opioid 50 times more powerful than heroin


According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's latest data, from 2014, West Virginia has the highest rate of drug overdose death in the country.

"It's way too early to tell what the heroin in these latest cases was laced, with but I suspect it was fentanyl and maybe something else," said Lemley. "A majority of the overdoses cases are laced with fentanyl, Xanax or something. It's very rare to find pure heroin these days."

A third of the overdoses deaths in Cabell County are probably related to fentanyl, according to Lemley.

'A very miserable existence'
The Cabell-Huntington Health Department was not directly involved with the latest overdoses but has been keeping track of the overdose statistics and has been working on solutions to the drug problem in the area.

"I can't speak directly to this case, but we have been preparing for heroin laced with elephant tranquillizers, which is the latest thing communities close to us are dealing with," said Michael Kilkenny, director of the health department.

"When I graduated from medical school in 1982, we used opioids for patients with acute pain and those close to death and dying only, not for chronic pain, because they were thought to be addictive. Then, in the 1990s, our thinking changed and we thought we were under-treating pain, so we started using more opioids," he said.

But since then, the thinking reversed again."In Huntington, we began prescribing much less opioids in 2010 because we thought they were harming people. We thought we were becoming more responsible, and people would stop using opioids when we stopped prescribing them. But then they turned to heroin. In many cases it wasn't to get high, it was just to keep from going into withdrawal. It's a very miserable existence for people, but heroin is cheaper."

The Cabell-Huntington Health Department is trying to combat the heroin problem with education and needle exchange programs and by providing naloxone to law enforcement and community organizations, according to Kilkenny.
 
well, a 23-year old that I had met died of an overdose yesterday... grew up in Tyler County

this is getting out of hand...
 
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