The importance of non-targeted testing to keep pace with a rapidly evolving synthetic opioid market.
The synthetic opioid market…is constantly evolving. Once a new substance is identified, it may only be prevalent for three to six months before it’s replaced by something new and yet to be identified by forensic laboratories.
For example, over one weekend in July 2018, Philadelphia-area hospitals experienced a surge of more than 100 patients with suspected opioid overdoses. Following the administration of naloxone, patients would become combative – an unusual reaction for an opioid overdose.
To help local public health and public safety agencies identify what was causing this troubling trend, the NPS Discovery drug early warning system at the Center for Forensic Science Research and Education (CFSRE) acquired a sample of “Santa Muerte,” the drug linked to the large number of overdoses. Advanced mass spectrometry analysis found within the sample a combination of fentanyl, heroin, and a synthetic cannabinoid – a combination not often seen in the region. Given the unique side effects that overdose patients were experiencing, it was thought this may be a synthetic drug combination worth tracking closely.
However, substances containing fentanyl and synthetic cannabinoids did not last long and were only a fraction of the whole drug supply in the region. After about six to nine months following the July overdoses involving “Santa Muerte,” these substances were largely replaced by new synthetic drug products, primarily fentanyl cut with xylazine.