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Journal Article

Citation

O'Donnell J, Gladden RM, Goldberger BA, Mattson CL, Kariisa M. MMWR Morb. Mortal. Wkly. Rep. 2020; 69(10): 271-273.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, (in public domain), Publisher U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)

DOI

10.15585/mmwr.mm6910a4

PMID

32163382

Abstract

Approximately two thirds of the 70,237 U.S. drug overdose deaths reported in 2017 involved opioids (1). Since 2013, opioid-involved overdose deaths involving illicitly manufactured fentanyl has sharply increased (1,2). Fentanyl analogs are structurally similar to fentanyl but vary in potency, are primarily illicitly distributed, and require specific postmortem toxicology testing for detection. Deaths involving fentanyl analogs, particularly carfentanil, increased in 10 states during 2016–2017 and often co-occurred with fentanyl (3). CDC funded 32 states and the District of Columbia (DC) to enhance postmortem toxicology testing and abstract data from death certificates and medical examiner and coroner reports on opioid-involved overdose deaths of unintentional and undetermined intent through the State Unintentional Drug Overdose Reporting System (SUDORS). Twelve states have collected data since July 2016, and an additional 20 states and DC began collecting data in July 2017 as part of a rapid expansion of SUDORS. This analysis 1) reports rapid changes in opioid-involved overdose deaths with fentanyl§ and fentanyl analogs detected during July 2016–December 2018 among 10 states with available SUDORS data and 2) provides a description of the most recent data on deaths with fentanyl and fentanyl analogs detected among 28 states and DC.** Tracking specific drugs involved in overdose deaths is critical because the risk for overdose for fentanyl and fentanyl analogs varies substantially. There are considerable differences in potency, dose, purity, and co-use patterns among drug products.

During July 2016–December 2018, a total of 26,104 opioid-involved overdose deaths were reported in the 10 states, including 5,083 (19.5%) for which at least one fentanyl analog was detected. Among these deaths, more than 15 different fentanyl analogs were identified, with more than one analog detected in some deaths; the five most commonly detected were acetylfentanyl (2,178 deaths; 8.3% of opioid-involved overdose deaths), carfentanil (1,724; 6.6%), furanylfentanyl (497; 1.9%), cyclopropylfentanyl (371; 1.4%), and acrylfentanyl (353; 1.4%). Deaths associated with carfentanil, furanylfentanyl, cyclopropylfentanyl, and acrylfentanyl peaked at different times (Figure). Deaths with carfentanil detected peaked twice, in September 2016 (87 deaths) and in April 2017 (235). Deaths with furanylfentanyl detected peaked in January 2017 (100), those with acrylfentanyl detected peaked in February 2017 (122), and those with cyclopropylfentanyl detected peaked in September 2017 (49). Deaths with these four analogs detected decreased to fewer than five each by December 2018. In contrast, acetylfentanyl was increasingly detected in opioid-involved overdose deaths over time, reaching 179 in December 2018. Fentanyl deaths increased by 25.8%, from 3,086 during July–December 2016 to 3,881 during July–December 2018.

During July–December 2018, in 28 states and DC, one or more fentanyl analogs were detected in 2,824 (19.4%) of 14,571 opioid-involved overdose deaths. The most commonly detected analogs during that period were acetylfentanyl (2,363; 16.2% of opioid-involved overdose deaths), a combined group of “fluorofentanyls”§§ (269; 1.8%), butyrylfentanyl (86; 0.6%), methoxyacetylfentanyl (85; 0.6%), and valerylfentanyl (71; 0.5%). Excluding acetylfentanyl, all other fentanyl analogs were detected in <5% of opioid-involved overdose deaths. Fentanyl was detected in 73.9% of opioid-involved overdose deaths.

The declines in overdose deaths with the fentanyl analogs carfentanil, furanylfentanyl, acrylfentanyl, and cyclopropylfentanyl detected contributed to previously reported declines in opioid-involved overdose deaths during 2018 among 25 states, even as deaths with fentanyl detected increased over time (4). This suggests a shift away from illicit fentanyl analog distribution to distribution of illicitly manufactured fentanyl ...


Language: en

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