| Literature DB >> 35385972 |
Stevie C Britch1,2, Sharon L Walsh3,4,5,6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The USA has recently entered the third decade of the opioid epidemic. Opioid overdose deaths reached a new record of over 74,000 in a 12-month period ending April 2021. Naloxone is the primary opioid overdose reversal agent, but concern has been raised that naloxone is not efficacious against the pervasive illicit high potency opioids (i.e., fentanyl and fentanyl analogs).Entities:
Keywords: Fentanyl overdose; Nalmefene; Naloxone; Opioid overdose; Overdose reversal
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35385972 PMCID: PMC8986509 DOI: 10.1007/s00213-022-06125-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychopharmacology (Berl) ISSN: 0033-3158 Impact factor: 4.530
Case studies on naloxone effects against highly potent opioid receptor agonist overdose
| Reference | Patient demographics | Opioid receptor agonist | Naloxone dosing | Summary outcomes | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Armenian et al. ( | 41-year-old female with a history of opioid misuse, seen in the emergency department (ED) | 13 min post-arrival serum tested positive for fentanyl (15.2 ng/mL), U-47700 (7.6 ng/mL), and hydrocodone (107.6 ng/mL). Patient reported oral ingestion | 0.4 mg IV naloxone given two min after arrival to the ED | The patient woke after receiving naloxone and was able to answer questions. A single dose of naloxone was sufficient to reverse overdose symptoms | Other substances were also present in the patient’s serum drug screen, including acetaminophen, benzoylecgonine, gabapentin, and sertraline |
| Bardsley ( | 32-year-old male with a history of heroin abuse, seen in the ED | Suspected carfentanil | 12 mg naloxone total; 4 mg IN naloxone upon arrival to ED and 8 mg IV naloxone (given in 2 mg increments) | Patient recovered and left against medical advice 70 min after resuscitation. Multiple doses of naloxone were required | Patient reported using unknown IV opioids, which they thought to be heroin. No confirmation of F/FA use |
| 26-year-old female with a history of heroin abuse, seen in the ED | Suspected carfentanil | 10 mg naloxone total; 2 mg IN naloxone upon arrival to ED and 8 mg IV naloxone HCL (given in 2 mg increments) | Patient recovered and was discharged after 3 h. Multiple doses of naloxone were required | Patient reported using unknown IV opioids, which they thought to be heroin. No confirmation of F/FA use | |
| Barrueto et al. ( | 21-year-old female | Oral fentanyl (steeped a 100 μg/h fentanyl patch in hot water and drank the resulting solution) | 0.4 mg IV naloxone administered in the ED | Patient recovered with one dose of naloxone | No toxicology confirmation of fentanyl. Unusual ingestion method |
| Coleman et al. ( | 33-year-old healthy female in active labor at 38 weeks gestation | 45 μg intrathecal sufentanil was given in error (typical dose is 5 μg) | 520 μg over 60 min post-partum | Patient complained of pruritus, but no changes in consciousness, respirations, or oxygen saturation occurred | Patient was in active labor, did not experience respiratory depression, and had no history of substance use |
| Çoruh et al. ( | 76-year-old male undergoing bronchoscopy and endobronchial transbronchial needle aspiration of paratracheal lymph node | 250 μg IV fentanyl | 0.2 mg IV naloxone | Patient developed chest wall rigidity and decreased oxygen saturation which was “rapidly” resolved with one dose of naloxone | No history of opioid use disorder |
| Fareed et al. ( | Male patient with a history of opioid use disorder and heroin use | Patient reported relapse with heroin use twice (unknown route of administration). Urine drug screen between uses was fentanyl positive, but not at time of overdose event | The patient received one “dose” of IN =naloxone at home, from bystander, and was momentarily alert. He received a second dose of naloxone (unknown administration route) by EMS, and a third dose of naloxone (unknown dose and route) was administered in the ED | The patient recovered but was admitted to a psychiatric unit for several days post overdose and received treatment for opioid use disorder | It is unclear how much naloxone the patient received. The fentanyl positive urine drug screen occurred prior to the overdose event and it is unclear if the same drug source was used before and after the drug screen; there is no confirmation of fentanyl in the patient’s system at the time of overdose |
| Kitch and Portela ( | 72-year-old male, seen in the ED | IN heroin | 4 mg naloxone total: 2 mg IN administered by law enforcement and two doses of 1 mg IV administered by EMS | Patient was intubated and admitted to the ICU. Extubated after several hours and discharged home 3 days later | No physiological testing to confirm presence of F/FAs. Law enforcement laboratory testing of heroin from an unknown scene showed fentanyl, it is unclear if this test was conducted on the drugs found at the overdose scene of the patients in this report or if the sample was from other heroin overdose events in that community during that time. One of these reports is of IN extended-release oxymorphone |
| 23-year-old male with a history of heroin use, seen in the ED | IV heroin | 4 mg IN total: 2 doses of 2 mg IN naloxone both administered by law enforcement | Patient was alert upon arrival to the ED, observed for 4 h and discharged home | ||
| 21-year-old male, seen in the ED | Heroin (unknown route) | 2 mg IN administered by law enforcement | Patient was alert upon arrival to the ED, observed for 4 h and discharged home | ||
| 42 or 43-year-old male history of IV drug use, seen in the ED | IN extended-release oxymorphone (one tablet) | 2 mg IN administered by law enforcement | Patient was alert upon arrival to the ED, observed for 5 h and discharged home | ||
| Lyttle et al. ( | 15-year-old girl seen in the ED, deliberate overdose | 6 mg transdermal fentanyl: 5 fentanyl patches at 100 μg/h for 12 h | IM naloxone administered by EMS (unknown dose) In the hospital she received two “doses” of IV naloxone followed by a naloxone infusion of 6 μg/kg/h, which was increased to 12 μg/kg/h for 24 h | After a single dose of naloxone by EMS the patient regained consciousness and had improved respiration, but respiration declined upon arrival to the ED. Naloxone administered in the ED only temporarily improved respiration, until a high dose naloxone infusion was given for 24 h. Patient was discharged after 9-days in a psychiatric unit | Patient had no history of opioid use disorder and overdose was intentional. The fentanyl dose the patient was exposed to was very large, much higher than what is often seen with accidental overdose |
| Marquardt and Tharratt ( | 36-year-old male seen in the ED | Patient heated contents of fentanyl patch and inhaled the smoke | 2 mg IV Narcan® administered by EMS | Patient had a respiratory rate of 6 breaths/m, after receiving a single dose of naloxone and arriving at the ED respiratory rate was 18 breaths/m. Patient was discharged home same day | Only a single dose of naloxone was needed to reverse fentanyl overdose. No blood analysis was conducted to determine blood fentanyl concentration |
| Nath et al. ( | 28-year-old male undergoing laparoscopic nephrectomy | 150 μg IV fentanyl | 200 μg IV over 5 min | Patient developed pulmonary edema post naloxone administration | The pulmonary edema discovered post-fentanyl and naloxone makes it difficult to determine the efficacy of naloxone to treat fentanyl vs the side effects of naloxone. No history of opioid use disorder |
| Raheemullah and Andruska ( | 62-year-old male with chronic hepatitis C and 20 year history of IV heroin use, seen in the ED | Patient reported heroin use. Urine drug screen opioid positive, blood drug screen acrylfentanyl positive | 2 mg IN naloxone administered by EMS | Patient’s respiratory rate improved from 3 breaths/m to 6 breaths/m after naloxone treatment. Patient was then intubated without further naloxone treatment. Patient was treated in ICU for 12 days | Patient was treated with fentanyl by EMS for intubation and was further sedated with propofol and fentanyl. Treatment of opioid overdose with additional opioids rather than naloxone makes interpretation of naloxone efficacy challenging |
| Raja et al. ( | 36-year-old-male with a history of opioid use disorder and IV heroin use, seen in ED | Patient reported 1 g IV heroin mixed with fentanyl across two injections separated by 3.5 h | One dose IN naloxone administered by bystander a second dose IN naloxone administered by first responders from fire department | Patient’s consciousness improved and respiratory rate improved from 4 breaths/m to 16 breaths/m several minutes after the second dose of IN naloxone and placement of an oropharyngeal airway. Upon arrival to the ED patient was alert and | There is no confirmation of fentanyl use. Urine drug screen conducted 16 h post-ED admission was negative for all drugs of abuse |
| Rogers et al. ( | 36-year-old male, seen in ED | Patient reported using inhaled acetyl fentanyl via e-cigarette vaping device and oral consumption of acetyl fentanyl mixed with alcoholic beverages | 6 mg IV naloxone total: 2 mg IV naloxone administered by EMS, 2 doses of 2 mg IV naloxone administered in the ED | Patient’s consciousness and respiratory rate improved after the first dose of naloxone. Mental status had declined upon arrival to ED, but recovered with a second dose of naloxone, and fully recovered after a 3rd dose of naloxone | No laboratory confirmation of acetyl fentanyl |
| Ryan and Meakin ( | 25-day-old neonate male, weighing 3.9 kg undergoing surgery for pyloric stenosis | 26 μg/kg fentanyl was given in error (intended dose was 2 μg/kg) | Bolus 40 μg IV naloxone, followed by increasing doses up to 200 μg IV naloxone. An additional 200 μg IV naloxone bolus was given followed by IV infusion of naloxone at 200 μg/h for 24 h | Patient had minimal reflex responses with “no respiratory effort” and spontaneous breathing started after the first 200 μg dose of naloxone | Patient was a neonate that received, due to error, a high fentanyl dose. Not representative of overdose in an adult with a history of opioid use disorder |
| Slingsby et al. ( | 15-month-old female, seen in ED | Father reported possible buprenorphine ingestion, urine toxicology positive for fentanyl but negative for buprenorphine | IV naloxone bolus followed by IV naloxone infusion (unknown doses) | Naloxone improved consciousness and respiration | Fentanyl dose and route of administration is unknown. Not representative of overdose in an adult with a history of opioid use disorder |
| 7-month-old female, seen in ED | Urine toxicology positive for fentanyl | None | Patient was not given fentanyl because it was initially suspected that her symptoms were due to infections etiology | Patient did not receive naloxone. Patient also tested positive for coronavirus. Not representative of overdose in an adult with a history of opioid use disorder | |
| 26-month-old-female, seen in ED | Urine toxicology positive for fentanyl | Unknown if naloxone was administered | Patients’ symptoms resolved and she appeared normal in the ED | Patient did not receive naloxone. Not representative of overdose in an adult with a history of opioid use disorder | |
| 23-month-old female, seen in ED | Urine toxicology was positive for fentanyl | IV naloxone bolus (unknown dose) | Patient improved with naloxone treatment | Not representative of overdose in an adult with a history of opioid use disorder. Dose of naloxone is unknown | |
| Wahl and Gault ( | 34-year-old male seen in the ED | Reported to have ingested 75 mcg/hr fentanyl patch | IM naloxone (800 mcg) by EMS. 50 mg oral naloxone tablet and 400 mcg IV naloxone was administered in the ED | Patient improved with naloxone treatment | No toxicology confirmation of fentanyl |
| Wilde et al. ( | 25-year-old male with a history of opioid use, seen in the ED | IN fentanyl spray reported, but blood analysis negative for fentanyl. Liquid chromatography-high resolution quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry showed the presence of chclopropylfentanyl | 0.8 mg naloxone total: two doses of 0.4 mg naloxone administered by ED physician | Patient improved with naloxone treatment | Patient tested positive for multiple psychoactive substances, including cocaine, cannabinoids, and LSD |
| Zuckerman et al. ( | 26-year-old-male with a history of opioid abuse | Patient masticated two 25 μg fentanyl patches. Blood toxicology was positive for fentanyl | 3.8 mg naloxone total: 2 mg IN naloxone, followed by 1 mg IV naloxone administered by EMS. 0.8 mg IV naloxone (two × 0.4 mg doses) administered in the ED | Naloxone treatment by EMS improved the patient’s respiratory rate improved from 6 breaths/m at the scene to 20 breaths/m upon arrival to the ED but declined and required two more naloxone doses. Patient was admitted for one day | Patient did not require more naloxone than what is provided in current products |
Community fentanyl outbreaks, retrospective reports, and surveys
| Reference | Population/data source | Opioid | Naloxone | Summary Outcomes | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Avetian et al. ( | 261 case reports from eight first-responder or community-based organizations | 95.4% heroin, 5.2% fentanyl | 4 mg IN | 1 dose: 65% 2 doses: 32.7% 3–4 doses: 2.4% 98.8% successful reversal of overdose | Type of opioid is “presumed.” No blood or urine confirmation of fentanyl or heroin use |
| Bell et al. ( | 1072 interviews of people who had used naloxone provided by the Prevention Point Pittsburg program between 2013 and 2016 | Allegheny County Medical Examiner’s Office data showed increase in the proportion of drug overdose deaths due to F/FAs in the area | 0.4 mg IM naloxone was defined as one dose | One dose of naloxone reversed 56.9% of overdose events, after a second dose of naloxone 92.6% of overdose events were reported as reversed | Reports may be from bystanders. No confirmation that fentanyl was involved in any of the cases in which naloxone was used |
| Bode et al. ( | Opioid overdose records in Jackson Memorial Hospital Emergency Department 2015–2016 | Unknown | Vials of naloxone/patient ratio in 2015 was 0.89, and in 2016 was 2.33 | Between 2015 and 2016 there was a disproportionate increase in naloxone administration compared to opioid overdose events. It is suggested that this effect is due to increased fentanyl overdose in the area | No blood or urine confirmation of fentanyl in overdose cases. No confirmation of increased fentanyl use in the community |
| Carpenter et al. ( | 121 people diagnosed with an opioid overdose by a physician in a single ED and had a positive urine drug screen for opioids | Urine drug screens indicated 28 patients were positive for opioids, 23 positive for fentanyl, and 70 positive for both opioids and fentanyl | Mean IV naloxone dose in those where naloxone was deemed effective: 0.58 mg (opioids only), 0.8 mg (fentanyl only), and 0.8 (opioids and fentanyl) | The mean dose of naloxone necessary to reverse opioid overdose was not statistically different between people who used opioids, fentanyl, or both | It is unclear how much naloxone patients received before arrival to the ED |
| DiSalvo et al. ( | Report on 9 patients in their 30’s across two EDs with a history of cocaine use (but no history of opioid use) | Several patients reported insufflation of cocaine, 8 patients had positive serum fentanyl (1.1–5 ng/mL) and the 9th declined testing | 7 patients who lost consciousness were treated with 1–8 mg naloxone (mean = 4.2 mg) IV or IN by EMS. No naloxone was given in the ED | All patients had recovered respiration by arrival at the ED. Four patients received > 1 dose of naloxone from EMS. Two patients received > 4 mg of naloxone from EMS | Only two patients received > 4 mg naloxone. Doses of fentanyl and serum fentanyl prior to naloxone are unknown. Time from onset of symptoms to naloxone treatment is unknown |
| Mahonski et al. ( | 1139 records of suspected opioid overdose from Poison Control Center in Maryland, 2015–2017 | Various suspected: heroin (774 cases), oxycodone (48 cases), methadone (16 cases), fentanyl, morphine, hydrocodone, and buprenorphine (16 cases total) | Average 3.12 mg naloxone | The majority of patients received 2 mg naloxone (62.2%) and another 33.2% received 4 mg naloxone. The total dose of naloxone increased between 2015 and 2017, while the reversal rate decreased | Less than 16 cases were suspected of fentanyl overdose. Includes naloxone doses given to people who expired |
| Marco et al. ( | Survey of adult patients in the ED for opioid overdose between 2016 and 2017 | Unknown. Patients reported a history of heroin (75%), cannabis (13%), and methamphetamine (11%) use | Average 5.8 mg pre-hospital naloxone | The range of naloxone was 0–26 mg, but this was self-reported and excluded people who were incapacitated | Excluded people who were incapable of completing the survey (possibly due to opioid overdose signs and symptoms). Overdose cannot be contributed to F/FA urine toxicology was performed on only 7% of patients |
| Massey et al. ( | 20 emergency responses due to opioid overdose within 53 h in West Virginia | Reported use of heroin in 14 patients. Toxicology showed opioids in 6 patients (not performed in 12 patients) | Various doses (0–4 mg) and routes of administration (IN, IV, and IM) | All patients recovered with naloxone treatment | Only four patients had confirmed F/FA via a public safety investigation. F/FA confirmation was not conducted in the other 17 patients |
| Merlin et al. ( | 2166 records of suspected opioid overdose and naloxone administration between 2014 and 2016, from RescueNet Zoll (Bloomfield, CO; largest EMS service provider for New Jersey) | Unknown | Various | 91% of patients recovered after a single dose of IN naloxone, 9% received a second dose, and 2.4% received a third dose | It is unclear what the range of cumulative naloxone doses were or if more than 4 mg naloxone was ever administered |
| Nielsen et al. ( | Ambulance patient care records of illicit opioid use, 2013–2018 in Victoria, Australia | Various, including suspected fentanyl | Various doses and routes of administration | Odds ratios for having an effective response from naloxone did not significantly differ across opioid types | It is unknown if larger doses of naloxone were given to people overdosing on fentanyl vs other opioids |
| Rowe et al. ( | Drug Overdose Prevention and Education Project (DOPE), California Electronic Death Reporting System records, and San Francisco Fire Department Records of EMS, 2014–2015 | Community outbreak of “China White” powder sold as heroin, tested by mass spectrometry as fentanyl | Various, unknown doses and routes of administration | During this community fentanyl-outbreak there was an increase in naloxone reversals by community bystanders (DOPE records), but no increase in overdose deaths involving opioids or fentanyl, and no increase in EMS incidents involving naloxone | Doses of naloxone given to people who overdosed on fentanyl vs other opioids is unknown |
| Schumann et al. ( | Chicago-based ED records and Cook County Medical Examiner’s Office records, 2005–2006 | Heroin and suspected fentanyl | EMS/bystander administration: 1.53 mg naloxone average (range: 0.4–4 mg) ED administration: 3.36 mg naloxone average (range: 0.4–12 mg) Various routes of administration | Average dose of naloxone given is lower than currently available products. Only one of 55 patients received more than 8 mg naloxone in the ED | Unclear if naloxone dose calculations include people who expired No toxicology confirmation of fentanyl for patients seen in the ED |
| Scheuermeyer et al. ( | 1009 records of suspected fentanyl overdose from a Vancouver, British Columbia ED, Sept-Dec 2016 | Suspected fentanyl | Median 0.4 mg naloxone administered by EMS (unknow route) Unknown dose and route of naloxone in the ED | Naloxone was administered by EMS or bystander in 546/1009 cases. Only 18 patients received naloxone in the ED, and none expired in the ED | No toxicology confirmation of fentanyl for patients; See Santos et al. ( |
| Somerville et al. ( | 64 interviews of adults in Massachusetts who had witnessed or experienced an opioid overdose in the past 6 months and used illicit opioids in the past 12 months, 2014–2016 | Suspected fentanyl | Typically dose in that area was 2 mg IN naloxone | 83% reported more than 2 doses of naloxone were required to reverse suspected fentanyl overdose | No toxicological confirmation of fentanyl overdose. It is unclear what doses of naloxone were needed to reverse suspected fentanyl overdose |
| Tomassoni et al. ( | Report on 12 patients across two emergency departments within 6 h for suspected opioid overdose | Suspected fentanyl: 11 patients tested positive for fentanyl; one patient was not tested | Total dose range of 0.5–6 mg 0–6 mg naloxone administered by EMS via various routes of administration 0–2 mg IV naloxone administered | Three patients expired. Two were dead on arrival to the ED, one expired from multiorgan failure 3 days later Naloxone doses were not larger than currently available products | Only 4 of 12 patients received more than 4 mg naloxone, one of which was dead on arrival |