Postmortem toxicology findings from the Camden Opioid Research Initiative

Author:

Kusic Dara M.ORCID,Heil Jessica,Zajic Stefan,Brangan Andrew,Dairo Oluseun,Heil Stacey,Feigin Gerald,Kacinko Sherri,Buono Russell J.,Ferraro Thomas N.,Rafeq Rachel,Haroz Rachel,Baston Kaitlan,Bodofsky Elliot,Sabia Michael,Salzman Matthew,Resch Alissa,Madzo Jozef,Scheinfeldt Laura B.,Issa Jean-Pierre J.,Jelinek JaroslavORCID

Abstract

The United States continues to be impacted by decades of an opioid misuse epidemic, worsened by the COVID-19 pandemic and by the growing prevalence of highly potent synthetic opioids (HPSO) such as fentanyl. In instances of a toxicity event, first-response administration of reversal medications such as naloxone can be insufficient to fully counteract the effects of HPSO, particularly when there is co-occurring substance use. In an effort to characterize and study this multi-faceted problem, the Camden Opioid Research Initiative (CORI) has been formed. The CORI study has collected and analyzed post-mortem toxicology data from 42 cases of decedents who expired from opioid-related toxicity in the South New Jersey region to characterize substance use profiles. Co-occurring substance use, whether by intent or through possible contamination of the illicit opioid supply, is pervasive among deaths due to opioid toxicity, and evidence of medication-assisted treatment is scarce. Nearly all (98%) of the toxicology cases show the presence of the HPSO, fentanyl, and very few (7%) results detected evidence of medication-assisted treatment for opioid use disorder, such as buprenorphine or methadone, at the time of death. The opioid toxicity reversal drug, naloxone, was detected in 19% of cases, but 100% of cases expressed one or more stimulants, and sedatives including xylazine were detected in 48% of cases. These results showing complex substance use profiles indicate that efforts at mitigating the opioid misuse epidemic must address the complications presented by co-occurring stimulant and other substance use, and reduce barriers to and stigmas of seeking effective medication-assisted treatments.

Funder

State of New Jersey

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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