Heroin or fentanyl: Prevalence of confirmed fentanyl in ED patients with suspected heroin overdose

Siri Shastry MD, MS, Jonathan Lin MD, PhD, Kim Aldy DO, Jeffrey Brent MD, PhD, Paul Wax MD, Alex Krotulski PhD, Sharan Campleman PhD, Shao Li MPH, Alison Meyn MPH, Stephanie Abston RN, Barry Logan PhD, Alexandra Amaducci DO, Bryan Judge MD, Michael Levine MD, Diane Calello MD, Joshua Shulman MD, Adrienne Hughes MD, Rachel Culbreth PhD, Evan Schwarz MD, Alex F. Manini MDMS, the Toxicology Investigators Consortium Fentalog Study Group
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Abstract

Background

United States drug overdose deaths are being driven by the increasing prevalence of fentanyl, but whether patients are knowingly using fentanyl is unclear. We examined the analytical confirmation of fentanyl in emergency department (ED) patients with documented heroin overdose.

Hypothesis

We hypothesized that the proportion of fentanyl and fentanyl analogs would be higher than that of confirmed heroin.

Methods

This is a subgroup analysis from a prospective multicenter consecutive cohort of ED patients age 18+ with opioid overdose presenting to 10 US sites within the Toxicology Investigators Consortium from 2020 to 2021. Toxicology analysis was performed using liquid chromatography quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry. De-identified toxicology results were paired with the clinical database. The primary outcome was the proportion of patients with fentanyl analytes detected in their serum.

Results

Of 1006 patients screened, 406 were eligible, and of 168 patients who reported that they had taken heroin or had a documented heroin overdose, 88% (n = 147) were in fact found to have fentanyl and/or a fentanyl analog present on serum analysis (< 0.0001). In contrast, only 46 of the 168 patients with reported or documented heroin overdose (27%) were found to have heroin biomarkers present.

Conclusion

The prevalence of confirmed fentanyl in ED patients with suspected heroin overdose was extremely high, while the prevalence of heroin was very low. There was a high degree of mismatch between the opioids believed to be the overdose agent versus the actual opioids identified on serum toxicology. Clinicians in the United States should presume that fentanyl is involved in all illicit opioid overdoses and should counsel patients on harm reduction measures.

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海洛因还是芬太尼在疑似海洛因过量的急诊室患者中确认芬太尼的流行率。
背景:芬太尼在美国越来越普遍,导致吸毒过量死亡,但患者是否在知情的情况下使用芬太尼尚不清楚。我们研究了急诊科(ED)有记录的海洛因过量患者中芬太尼的分析确认情况:我们假设芬太尼和芬太尼类似物的比例将高于确认的海洛因比例:这是一项前瞻性多中心连续队列的亚组分析,对象是 2020 年至 2021 年期间在毒理学研究者联盟(Toxicology Investigators Consortium)的 10 个美国站点就诊的阿片类药物过量的 18 岁以上 ED 患者。毒理学分析采用液相色谱四极杆飞行时间质谱法进行。去标识的毒理学结果与临床数据库配对。主要结果是血清中检测到芬太尼分析物的患者比例:在接受筛查的 1006 名患者中,有 406 名符合条件,在 168 名自称吸食过海洛因或有海洛因过量记录的患者中,有 88% (n = 147)的患者在血清分析中被发现含有芬太尼和/或芬太尼类似物(p 结论:芬太尼和/或芬太尼类似物的阳性率为 100%:在疑似海洛因过量的急诊科患者中,芬太尼的确诊率极高,而海洛因的确诊率却很低。被认为是用药过量的阿片类药物与血清毒理学鉴定出的实际阿片类药物之间存在高度不匹配。美国的临床医生应假定芬太尼涉及所有非法阿片类药物过量,并应指导病人采取减少伤害的措施。
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