Daniulaityte Raminta, Juhascik Matthew P, Strayer Kraig E, Sizemore Ioana E, Harshbarger Kent E, Antonides Heather M, Carlson Robert R
MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep. 2017 Sep 1;66(34):904-908. doi: 10.15585/mmwr.mm6634a3.
Ohio is experiencing unprecedented loss of life caused by unintentional drug overdoses (1), with illicitly manufactured fentanyl (IMF) emerging as a significant threat to public health (2,3). IMF is structurally similar to pharmaceutical fentanyl, but is produced in clandestine laboratories and includes fentanyl analogs that display wide variability in potency (2); variations in chemical composition of these drugs make detection more difficult. During 2010-2015, unintentional drug overdose deaths in Ohio increased 98%, from 1,544 to 3,050.* In Montgomery County (county seat: Dayton), one of the epicenters of the opioid epidemic in the state, unintentional drug overdose deaths increased 40% in 1 year, from 249 in 2015 to 349 in 2016 (estimated unadjusted mortality rate = 57.7 per 100,000) (4). IMFs have not been part of routine toxicology testing at the coroner's offices and other types of medical and criminal justice settings across the country (2,3). Thus, data on IMF test results in the current outbreak have been limited. The Wright State University and the Montgomery County Coroner's Office/Miami Valley Regional Crime Laboratory (MCCO/MVRCL) collaborated on a National Institutes of Health study of fentanyl analogs and metabolites and other drugs identified in 281 unintentional overdose fatalities in 24 Ohio counties during January-February 2017. Approximately 90% of all decedents tested positive for fentanyl, 48% for acryl fentanyl, 31% for furanyl fentanyl, and 8% for carfentanil. Pharmaceutical opioids were identified in 23% of cases, and heroin in 6%, with higher proportions of heroin-related deaths in Appalachian counties. The majority of decedents tested positive for more than one type of fentanyl. Evidence suggests the growing role of IMFs, and the declining presence of heroin and pharmaceutical opioids in unintentional overdose fatalities, compared with 2014-2016 data from Ohio and other states (3-5). There is a need to include testing for IMFs as part of standard toxicology panels for biological specimens used in the medical, substance abuse treatment, and criminal justice settings.
俄亥俄州正经历着由意外药物过量导致的前所未有的生命损失(1),非法制造的芬太尼(IMF)成为对公众健康的重大威胁(2,3)。IMF在结构上与药用芬太尼相似,但在秘密实验室生产,且包括效力差异很大的芬太尼类似物(2);这些药物化学成分的差异使检测更加困难。在2010 - 2015年期间,俄亥俄州意外药物过量死亡人数增加了98%,从1544人增至3050人。*在该州阿片类药物流行的中心之一蒙哥马利县(县府:代顿),意外药物过量死亡人数在1年中增加了40%,从2015年的249人增至2016年的349人(估计未经调整的死亡率 = 每10万人57.7人)(4)。在全国范围内,IMF尚未成为验尸官办公室以及其他类型医疗和刑事司法机构常规毒理学检测的一部分(2,3)。因此,当前疫情中IMF检测结果的数据有限。赖特州立大学与蒙哥马利县验尸官办公室/迈阿密谷地区犯罪实验室(MCCO/MVRCL)合作开展了一项美国国立卫生研究院的研究,对2017年1月至2月期间俄亥俄州24个县281例意外过量死亡案例中鉴定出的芬太尼类似物、代谢物及其他药物进行了研究。所有死者中约90%芬太尼检测呈阳性,48%丙烯酰芬太尼检测呈阳性,31%呋喃基芬太尼检测呈阳性,8%卡芬太尼检测呈阳性。23%的案例中鉴定出了药用阿片类药物,6%鉴定出了海洛因,阿巴拉契亚县与海洛因相关的死亡比例更高。大多数死者不止一种芬太尼检测呈阳性。有证据表明,与俄亥俄州及其他州2014 - 2016年的数据相比(3 - 5),IMF在意外过量死亡案例中的作用日益增大,而海洛因和药用阿片类药物的比例在下降。有必要将IMF检测纳入医疗、药物滥用治疗及刑事司法机构使用的生物样本标准毒理学检测项目中。