| Literature DB >> 35951491 |
R Matt Gladden, Vaughne Chavez-Gray, Julie O'Donnell, Bruce A Goldberger.
Abstract
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Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35951491 PMCID: PMC9400538 DOI: 10.15585/mmwr.mm7132a3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep ISSN: 0149-2195 Impact factor: 35.301
Demographic and other characteristics of drug overdose deaths involving eutylone (N = 343), by co-involvement with opioids — State Unintentional Drug Overdose Reporting System, United States,* 2020
| Characteristic | No. (%) of eutylone-involved deaths | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Total deaths | Deaths involving any opioid | Deaths not involving any opioid | |
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| Male | 246 (71.7) | 203 (71.7) | 43 (71.7) |
| Female | 97 (28.3) | 80 (28.3) | 17 (28.3) |
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| 15–24 | 24 (7.0) | 20 (7.1) | 4 (6.7) |
| 25–34 | 130 (37.9) | 111 (39.2) | 19 (31.7) |
| 35–44 | 102 (29.7) | 83 (29.3) | 19 (31.7) |
| 45–54 | 57 (16.6) | 45 (15.9) | 12 (20.0) |
| ≥55 | 30 (8.7) | 24 (8.5) | 6 (10.0) |
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| White, non-Hispanic | 161 (46.9) | 144 (50.9) | 17 (28.3) |
| Black, non-Hispanic | 115 (33.5) | 78 (27.6) | 37 (61.7) |
| Other, non-Hispanic | 8 (2.3) | 8 (2.8) | 0 (—) |
| Hispanic | 37 (10.8) | 34 (12.0) | 3 (5.0) |
| Unknown/Missing | 22 (6.4) | 19 (6.7) | 3 (5.0) |
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| Northeast | 14 (4.1) | 10 (3.5) | 4 (6.7) |
| Midwest | 12 (3.5) | 9 (3.2) | 3 (5.0) |
| South | 314 (91.5) | 261 (92.2) | 53 (88.3) |
| West | 3 (0.9) | 3 (1.1) | 0 (—) |
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| Any opioid | 283 (82.5) | 283 (100.0) | —†† |
| IMFs | 265 (77.3) | 265 (93.6) | —†† |
| Heroin | 39 (11.4) | 39 (13.8) | —†† |
| Prescription opioid | 39 (11.4) | 39 (13.8) | —†† |
| Other stimulants, not eutylone† | 191 (55.7) | 164 (58.0) | 27 (45.0) |
| Cocaine or methamphetamine§ | 182 (53.1) | 159 (56.2) | 23 (38.3) |
| Methamphetamine† | 54 (15.7) | 43 (15.2) | 11 (18.3) |
| Cocaine§ | 147 (42.9) | 133 (47.0) | 14 (23.3) |
| No opioid or other stimulant | 33 (9.6) | —†† | 33 (55.0) |
| Benzodiazepines† | 48 (14.0) | 44 (15.5) | 4 (6.7) |
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| 23 (12.6) | 10 (6.6) | 13 (40.6) |
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| 13 (7.1) | 4 (2.6) | 9 (28.1) |
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| 15 (8.2) | 8 (5.3) | 7 (21.9) |
Abbreviations: IMF = illicitly manufactured fentanyl; MDMA = methylenedioxymethamphetamine.
* Forty-four jurisdictions provided data: Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, and Wisconsin. Data only from the death certificate were analyzed for three states: Alabama, South Carolina, and Wisconsin.
† No significant difference between eutylone-involved deaths with and without opioids was found using Fisher’s exact test (p>0.05).
§ A significant difference between eutylone-involved deaths with and without opioids was found using Fisher’s exact test (p<0.05). Test excluded missing values.
¶ U.S. Census Bureau regions were used to stratify jurisdictions into geographic regions. https://www2.census.gov/geo/pdfs/maps-data/maps/reference/us_regdiv.pdf
** A drug overdose can involve multiple drugs, such as IMF, eutylone, and cocaine. Consequently, specific drug percentages when summed will exceed 100%.
By definition, this category will be zero. For example, eutylone-involved deaths with no opioid co-involvement did not have any opioids (e.g., IMF, heroin, and prescription) involved in the overdose.
§§ Did not include Alabama, South Carolina, or Wisconsin. Only 26 of the 182 eutylone-involved deaths in Florida had a medical examiner report at the time of this analysis and thus are not representative of Florida eutylone-involved deaths.
¶¶ Two authors reviewed narrative information abstracted from medical examiner or coroner reports for evidence of decedent using MDMA before the overdose (i.e., witness reported MDMA use by decedent before overdose symptoms) or a history of MDMA use (i.e., decedent was known by family to use MDMA frequently).