| Literature DB >> 31465320 |
R Matt Gladden1, Julie O'Donnell1, Christine L Mattson1, Puja Seth1.
Abstract
From 2013 to 2017, the number of opioid-involved overdose deaths (opioid deaths) in the United States increased 90%, from 25,052 to 47,600.* This increase was primarily driven by substantial increases in deaths involving illicitly manufactured fentanyl (IMF) or fentanyl analogs† mixed with heroin, sold as heroin, or pressed into counterfeit prescription pills (1-3). Methamphetamine-involved and cocaine-involved deaths that co-involved opioids also substantially increased from 2016 to 2017 (4). Provisional 2018§ estimates of the number of opioid deaths suggest a small decrease from 2017. Investigating the extent to which decreases occurred broadly or were limited to a subset of opioid types (e.g., prescription opioids versus IMF) and drug combinations (e.g., IMF co-involving cocaine) can assist in targeting of intervention efforts. This report describes opioid deaths during January-June 2018 and changes from July-December 2017 in 25¶ of 32 states and the District of Columbia participating in CDC's State Unintentional Drug Overdose Reporting System (SUDORS).** Opioid deaths were analyzed by involvement (opioid determined by medical examiner or coroner to contribute to overdose death) of prescription or illicit opioids,†† as well as by the presence (detection of the drug in decedent) of co-occurring nonopioid drugs (cocaine, methamphetamine, and benzodiazepines). Three key findings emerged regarding changes in opioid deaths from July-December 2017 to January-June 2018. First, overall opioid deaths decreased 4.6%. Second, decreases occurred in prescription opioid deaths without co-involved illicit opioids and deaths involving non-IMF illicit synthetic opioids (fentanyl analogs and U-series drugs) (5). Third, IMF deaths, especially those with multiple illicit opioids and common nonopioids, increased. Consequently, IMF was involved in approximately two-thirds of opioid deaths during January-June 2018. Notably, during January-June 2018, 62.6% of all opioid deaths co-occurred with at least one common nonopioid drug. To maintain and accelerate reductions in opioid deaths, efforts to prevent IMF-involved deaths and address polysubstance misuse with opioids must be enhanced. Key interventions include broadening outreach to groups at high risk for IMF or fentanyl analog exposure and overdose. Improving linkage to and engagement in risk-reduction services and evidence-based treatment for persons with opioid and other substance use disorders with attention to polysubstance use or misuse is also needed.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31465320 PMCID: PMC6715260 DOI: 10.15585/mmwr.mm6834a2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep ISSN: 0149-2195 Impact factor: 17.586
Number and percentage of opioid overdose deaths that co-involved another opioid, by opioid type (illicitly manufactured fentanyl [IMF],* fentanyl analogs, heroin, and prescription opioids) — 25 states, State Unintentional Drug Overdose Reporting System (SUDORS), January–June 2018
| Opioid type involved in opioid death** | No. of deaths Jan–Jun 2018 | No. of deaths with co-involved opioid types (%) | ||||
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| IMF | Fentanyl analog | Heroin | Other illicit opioid†† | Prescription opioid | ||
| Any suspected IMF | 9,105 | — | 2,199 (24.2) | 3,589 (39.4) | 4,785 (52.6) | 1,250 (13.7) |
| Any fentanyl analog | 2,678 | 2,199 (82.1) | — | 1,172 (43.8) | 2,366 (88.3) | 356 (13.3) |
| Any suspected heroin | 5,281 | 3,589 (68.0) | 1,172 (22.2) | — | 3,747 (71.0) | 796 (15.1) |
| Any prescription opioid | 3,853 | 1,250 (32.4) | 356 (9.2) | 796 (20.7) | 1,562 (40.5) | — |
*Among fentanyl-involved deaths, 87.2%, 11.2%, and 1.6% were suspected to involve IMF, had insufficient data to classify the fentanyl death as IMF or prescription fentanyl, and were suspected to involve prescription fentanyl, respectively. Because the majority of identified cases involved IMF, and characteristics of unclassified fentanyl deaths were more similar to IMF-involved deaths than to prescription fentanyl–involved deaths, unclassified fentanyl deaths were categorized as suspected IMF-involved.
† Fentanyl analog-involved deaths included deaths involving carfentanil, acetylfentanyl, acrylfentanyl, furanylfentanyl, 3-methylfentanyl, butyrylfentanyl, cyclopropylfentanyl, crotonylfentanyl, 4/para-fluorofentanyl, 4/para-fluorobutyrylfentanyl, 4/para-isobutyrylfentanyl, cyclopentylfentanyl, methoxyacetylfentanyl, isobutyrylfentanyl, furanylethylfentanyl, methoxybutyrlfentanyl, benzylfentanyl, valerylfentanyl, alpha-methylfentanyl, tetrahydrofuranylfentanyl, ocfentanil, betahydroxythiofentanyl, alfentanil, sufentanil, methylcarfentanil, methylthiofentanyl, phenylfentanyl, omethylacetylfentanyl, and isovalerylfentanyl.
§ Included any opioid deaths involving prescription opioids (oxycodone, oxymorphone, hydrocodone, hydromorphone, tramadol, buprenorphine, methadone, morphine, codeine, prescription fentanyl, meperidine, tapentadol, dextrorphan, levorphanol, propoxyphene, noscapine, and pentazocine). Other drugs might have been involved or co-occurred with the prescription opioid.
¶ Alaska, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Kentucky, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Missouri, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, and Wisconsin.
** U-series deaths were not reported in the analyses because only 63 deaths involved U-series drugs in the 25 SUDORS states during January–June 2018.
†† Any illicit opioid other than that listed in drug category. For deaths involving illicit opioids (IMF, fentanyl analogs, and heroin) the illicit drug is excluded from this column. For example, 52.6% of IMF deaths co-involved at least one fentanyl analog, heroin, or U-series drug.
Change in the number of opioid overdose deaths, by opioid type, eight common opioid drug combinations, and commonly co-occurring nonopioids (cocaine, methamphetamine, and benzodiazepines) — 25 states,* State Unintentional Drug Overdose Reporting System (SUDORS), July–December 2017 to January–June 2018
| Characteristic | Opioid deaths with information on involved opioids, Jan–Jun 2018, no. (%) | Change in no. of opioid deaths, Jul–Dec 2017 to Jan–Jun 2018, no. (%) | % Nonopioid drugs commonly present in opioid deaths, Jan–Jun 2018 | |||
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| Cocaine, any† | Meth-amphetamine, any† | Benzo-diazepines, any | All three drugs, any | |||
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| NA | NA | 81.3 | 81.8 | 67.5 | 80.6** |
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| Any prescription opioid§§ | 3,853 (28.7) | −271 (−6.6)§ | 19.8 | 10.0 | 50.1 | 64.3 |
| Any illicit opioid¶¶ | 11,124 (82.9) | −376 (−3.3)§ | 38.6 | 12.8 | 28.2 | 62.6 |
| Any suspected IMF*** | 9,105 (67.9) | 910 (11.1)§ | 39.7 | 11.2 | 27.8 | 62.0 |
| Any suspected heroin | 5,281 (39.4) | −83 (−1.5) | 38.4 | 13.8 | 28.5 | 63.1 |
| Any fentanyl analog††† | 2,678 (20.0) | −627 (−19.0)§ | 40.3 | 11.2 | 30.9 | 63.6 |
| Any U-series§§§ | 63 (0.5) | −190 (−75.1)§ | 36.5 | 7.9 | 39.7 | 61.9 |
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| Opioid combinations co-involving IMF | ||||||
| IMF with no other illicit opioids | 4,320 (32.2) | 370 (9.4)§ | 38.3 | 12.1 | 27.1 | 61.7 |
| IMF with heroin | 2,566 (19.1) | 222 (9.5)§ | 40.8 | 9.2 | 26.9 | 61.0 |
| IMF with fentanyl analogs | 1,172 (8.7) | 120 (11.4)§ | 41.6 | 11.8 | 29.6 | 64.2 |
| IMF with heroin and fentanyl analogs | 1,008 (7.5) | 250 (33.0)§ | 40.4 | 11.8 | 30.5 | 63.4 |
| Illicit opioid combinations not co-involving IMF | ||||||
| Heroin with no other illicit opioid | 1,534 (11.4) | −306 (−16.6)§ | 33.3 | 23.5 | 28.9 | 66.4 |
| Fentanyl analogs with no other illicit opioid | 312 (2.3) | −661 (−67.9)§ | 35.9 | 9.6 | 33.3 | 61.5 |
| Prescription opioid with no illicit opioid | 2,291 (17.1) | −272 (−10.6)§ | 11.6 | 8.7 | 53.5 | 62.6 |
| All other combinations of opioids | 212 (1.6) | −371 (−63.6)§ | 36.3 | 7.1 | 36.3 | 61.8 |
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| Any acetylfentanyl | 1,716 (12.8) | 590 (52.4)§ | 40.9 | 12.0 | 29.5 | 63.6 |
| Acetylfentanyl with IMF | 1,685 (12.6) | 615 (57.5)§ | 41.0 | 12.0 | 29.3 | 63.5 |
| Acetylfentanyl no IMF | 31 (0.2) | −25 (−44.6) | 35.5 | 9.7 | 41.9 | 67.7 |
| All other fentanyl analogs | 1,100 (8.2) | −1,228 (−52.7)§ | 39.8 | 9.8 | 32.4 | 63.5 |
| Other fentanyl analogs with IMF | 645 (4.8) | −274 (−29.8)§ | 42.9 | 10.9 | 30.7 | 64.8 |
| Other fentanyl analogs no IMF | 455 (3.4) | −954 (−67.7)§ | 35.4 | 8.4 | 34.7 | 61.8 |
Abbreviations: IMF = illicitly manufactured fentanyl; NA = not applicable.
* Alaska, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Kentucky, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Missouri, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, and Wisconsin.
† Only the two most frequently co-occurring types of stimulants (cocaine and methamphetamine) are reported because other types of stimulants such as amphetamines did not meet inclusion criteria.
§ Statistically significantly change from July–December 2017 to January–June 2018 based on z-tests or nonoverlapping confidence intervals if the number of deaths was <100 (p<0.05).
For cocaine, methamphetamine, and benzodiazepines, this row reports a percentage calculated by dividing the number of opioid deaths in which the drug was present and reported as contributing to the opioid death (numerator) by the number of opioid deaths in which the drug was present (i.e., detected by toxicology tests) irrespective of whether it contributed to the opioid death (denominator).
** Percentage of all opioid deaths in which cocaine, methamphetamine, or benzodiazepines contributed to death.
†† An opioid death might involve multiple opioids. Thus, total opioid deaths and change in opioid deaths will be different than the sum of the deaths associated with each opioid type. Other nonopioid drugs might have been involved or co-occurred.
§§ Included any opioid death involving prescription opioids (oxycodone, oxymorphone, hydrocodone, hydromorphone, tramadol, buprenorphine, methadone, morphine, codeine, prescription fentanyl, meperidine, tapentadol, dextrorphan, levorphanol, propoxyphene, noscapine, and pentazocine). Other drugs might have been involved or co-occurred.
¶¶ Included any opioid death involving IMF, heroin, fentanyl analogs, or U-series drugs. Other drugs might have been involved or co-occurred.
*** Among fentanyl-involved deaths, 87.2%, 11.2%, and 1.6% were suspected to involve IMF, had insufficient data to classify the fentanyl death as IMF or prescription fentanyl, and were suspected to involve prescription fentanyl, respectively. Because the majority of identified cases involved IMF, and characteristics of unclassified fentanyl deaths were more similar to IMF-involved deaths than to prescription fentanyl–involved deaths, unclassified fentanyl deaths were categorized as suspected IMF-involved.††† Fentanyl analog deaths included deaths involving carfentanil, acetylfentanyl, acrylfentanyl, furanylfentanyl, 3-methylfentanyl, butyrylfentanyl, cyclopropylfentanyl, crotonylfentanyl, 4/para-fluorofentanyl, 4/para-fluorobutyrylfentanyl, 4/para-isobutyrylfentanyl, cyclopentylfentanyl, methoxyacetylfentanyl, isobutyrylfentanyl, furanylethylfentanyl, methoxybutyrlfentanyl, benzylfentanyl, valerylfentanyl, alpha-methylfentanyl, tetrahydrofuranylfentanyl, ocfentanil, betahydroxythiofentanyl, alfentanil, sufentanil, methylcarfentanil, methylthiofentanyl, phenylfentanyl, omethylacetylfentanyl, and isovalerylfentanyl.
§§§ U-series drugs are novel nonfentanyl-related synthetic opioids with no authorized medical uses. U-series drug deaths include those involving U-47700 and its analogs U-48800 and U-49900. U-47700, a nonfentanyl benzamide compound developed by a pharmaceutical company, is not authorized for medical use in the United States and is currently distributed illicitly for its heroin-like effect. Deaths involving U-50488 and U-51754 were also included in this category, but each was involved in five or fewer deaths.
¶¶¶ Six categories are combinations of the illicit opioids involved in death (IMF, heroin, fentanyl analog, and U-series) that were involved in >200 deaths during January–June 2018. These deaths might co-involve prescription opioids and co-occur with nonopioids. The “prescription opioids with no illicit opioid” category includes only deaths involving prescription opioids with no illicit opioid co-involvement but might co-occur with other nonopioid drugs. The “all other combinations of opioids” category includes opioid deaths that involved opioid drug combinations not listed, primarily opioid deaths involving U-series drugs or heroin deaths co-involving fentanyl analogs.
Changes in the number and percentage of opioid deaths co-occurring with benzodiazepines, cocaine, and methamphetamine, by type of opioids involved in death — 25 states,* State Unintentional Drug Overdose Reporting System (SUDORS), July–December 2017 to January–June 2018
| Type of opioid involved in death | No. of opioid deaths with co-occurring drugs (%) | |||
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| Benzodiazepines† | Cocaine† | Methamphetamine† | None of the three drugs | |
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| Any IMF** | 256 (11.3)¶ | 445 (14.0)¶ | 241 (31.0)¶ | 217 (6.7)¶ |
| Illicit opioid, no IMF†† | −389 (−39.0)¶ | −514 (−42.9)¶ | −69 (−14.7)¶ | −537 (−43.3)¶ |
| Prescription opioid, no illicit opioid§§ | −131 (−9.7)¶ | −37 (−12.2) | 34 (20.5) | −117 (−12.0)¶ |
Abbreviation: IMF = illicitly manufactured fentanyl.
* Alaska, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Kentucky, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Missouri, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, and Wisconsin.
† Opioid deaths co-occurring with benzodiazepines, cocaine and methamphetamine are not mutually exclusive as deaths associated with multiple nonopioids (e.g., cocaine and benzodiazepines) will be counted in both categories.
§ All opioid deaths (N = 13,415 during January–June 2018).
¶ Statistically significant change from July–December 2017 to January–June 2018 based on z-tests or nonoverlapping confidence intervals if the number of deaths was <100 (p<0.05).
** All opioid deaths where IMF was involved (N = 9,105 during January–June 2018).
†† All deaths involving other illicit opioids (heroin, fentanyl analogs, and U-series) where IMF was not involved (N = 2,019 during January–June 2018).
§§ Deaths involving prescription opioids without illicit opioid involvement (N = 2,291 deaths during January–June 2018).