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215


Willingness to provide a hair sample for drug testing: results from an anonymous multi-city intercept survey

Won, Nae Y; Jabot, Brittney; Wang, Anna; Palamar, Joseph J; Cottler, Linda B
PMID: 38547406
ISSN: 1097-9891
CID: 5645162

Illicitly Manufactured Fentanyl Use Among Individuals in the U.S., 2022

Palamar, Joseph J
INTRODUCTION/BACKGROUND:While morbidity and mortality related to synthetic opioids such as illicitly manufactured fentanyl (IMF) are monitored in the U.S., there has been a lack of national survey data focusing on use. Survey data are important as self-report can help estimate prevalence of use among living persons. METHODS:Data were examined from the 2022 National Survey on Drug Use and Health, a nationally representative probability sample of noninstitutionalized individuals age ≥12 in the U.S. (N=59,069). Prevalence and correlates of past-year use of IMF were estimated. Data were analyzed in 2024. RESULTS:The estimated prevalence of past-year IMF use was 0.23% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.17-0.31). Compared to no past-year use, individuals were at increased odds for IMF use if proxy-diagnosed with use disorder involving use of cannabis (aOR=3.72, 95% CI: 1.34-10.32), cocaine (aOR=11.96, 95% CI: 4.78-29.93), methamphetamine (aOR=5.60, 95% CI: 1.65-19.02), heroin (aOR=20.56, 95% CI: 8.90-47.52), and/or prescription opioids (aOR=10.65, 95% CI: 3.54-32.03). (Mis)use without use disorder was only significant for prescription opioids (aOR=5.77, 95% CI: 2.55-13.06). Those receiving treatment for substance use in the past year were also at increased odds for use (aOR=5.79, 95% CI: 2.58-13.00). CONCLUSIONS:Prevalence of IMF use is rare in the general U.S. POPULATION/METHODS:While past-year (mis)use of other drugs (without use disorder) was not consistently associated with IMF use, cannabis, cocaine, methamphetamine, heroin, and prescription opioid use disorder was associated with higher odds of IMF use, suggesting that more "severe" use of various drugs is more of a risk factor than use.
PMID: 38527696
ISSN: 1873-2607
CID: 5644642

The Rapidly Shifting Ketamine Landscape in the US

Wilkinson, Samuel T; Palamar, Joseph J; Sanacora, Gerard
PMID: 38170542
ISSN: 2168-6238
CID: 5628342

Drug Checking for Fentanyl as Surveillance to Inform Monitoring of Overdose Risk [Letter]

Palamar, Joseph J
PMID: 38246734
ISSN: 1873-2607
CID: 5624512

Five Cases of Unintentional Exposure to BZO-4en-POXIZID among Nightclub Attendees in New York City

Palamar, Joseph J; Massano, Marta; Salomone, Alberto
A new class of synthetic cannabinoids called OXIZIDs has emerged in recent years. This class consists of compounds with oxindole cores and hydrazide/hydrazone linker moieties and has often been described as being designed to circumvent a Chinese class-wide ban that was effective as of July 1, 2021. However, through hair testing of nightclub attendees in New York City-a high-risk population for recreational drug use-we have evidence suggesting exposures to an OXIZID called BZO-4en-POXIZID (4en-pentyl MDA-19) prior to the effective ban. Through analysis of 6 cm segmented hair samples from attendees collected in 2021, we detected five cases of exposure. Specifically, we detected a cluster of three cases based on hair samples collected on June 20, 2021, and then two additional cases from samples collected on July 16, 2021. Four of these hair samples were long enough to analyze two 6 cm hair segments (representing approximately two six-month timeframes) and three of four of these cases tested positive for repeated exposure (for an estimated exposure over six months prior to hair collection). All cases included young adult females reporting past-year cannabis use but all tested negative for THC exposure. Three cases also reported past-year use of cocaine, ecstasy, and/or ketamine, and four cases tested positive for exposure to cocaine, MDMA, MDA, methamphetamine, and/or eutylone. These subjects were exposed to BZO-4en-POXIZID-likely as an adulterant in other drugs, and these cases are among the first documented cases which occurred approximately half a year before the Chinese legislative ban.
PMID: 37952092
ISSN: 1945-2403
CID: 5611072

National and regional trends in seizures of shrooms (psilocybin) in the United States, 2017-2022

Palamar, Joseph J; Fitzgerald, Nicole D; Carr, Thomas H; Rutherford, Caroline; Keyes, Katherine M; Cottler, Linda B
BACKGROUND:Psilocybin, the principle psychoactive component in "shrooms", is regaining acceptance in therapeutic settings, leading to media coverage of medical benefits associated with use. Possession is also becoming increasingly decriminalized throughout the United States. There is a lack of data on prevalence of shroom use, but trends in law enforcement seizure data can provide one indicator of shroom availability in US communities. We determined whether seizures of shrooms have shifted between 2017 and 2022. METHODS:This study examined national and regional trends in counts and total weight of shroom seizures reported to High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas in the US between 2017 and 2022 (N=4526). RESULTS:There were 402 seizures in 2017 compared to 1396 in 2022 with the plurality occurring in the Midwest (36.0%), followed by the West (33.5%). Between 2017 Quarter 1 (Q1) and 2022 Quarter 4 (Q4), the number of seizures increased by 368.9% (AQPC=7.0; 95 CI: 5.9-8.1) and there were significant increases in all four regions. In terms of weight, 226.0kg was seized in 2017 vs. 844.0kg in 2022, and the greatest total weight in seizures was in the West (1864.2kg, 42.6%), followed by the South (1831.9kg, 41.8%). Between 2017 Q1 and 2022 Q4, the total weight seized in the US increased by 2749.7% (AQPC=6.2, 95% CI: 0.3-12.4) and there were significant increases in all four regions. CONCLUSIONS:Seizures of shrooms have increased, suggesting that availability may be escalating; thus, increases in prevention efforts and harm reduction education are warranted.
PMID: 38326175
ISSN: 1879-0046
CID: 5632272

Trends in reported and biologically confirmed drug use among people who use ecstasy in the nightclub/festival-attending population, 2016-2022

Palamar, Joseph J; Salomone, Alberto; Massano, Marta; Cleland, Charles M
BACKGROUND/UNASSIGNED:Nightclub/festival attendees are a population with high rates of party drug use, but research is needed to determine whether there have been shifts in unintended drug exposure in this population (e.g., via adulterants) to inform prevention and harm reduction efforts. METHODS/UNASSIGNED:Adults entering nightclubs and festivals in New York City were asked about past-year drug use in 2016 through 2022, with a subset providing a hair sample for testing. We focused on the 1943 who reported ecstasy use (of which 247 had a hair sample analyzed) and compared trends in self-reported drug use, drug positivity, and adjusted prevalence (adjusting for unreported use). RESULTS/UNASSIGNED:MDMA positivity decreased from 74.4 % to 42.3 %, and decreases occurred regarding detection of synthetic cathinones ("bath salts"; a 100.0 % decrease), MDA (a 76.9 % decrease), amphetamine (an 81.3 % decrease), methamphetamine (a 64.2 % decrease), and ketamine (a 33.4 % decrease) (ps < .05). Although prevalence of MDA and synthetic cathinone use was comparable between self-report and adjusted report in 2022, gaps in prevalence were wider in 2016 (ps < .01). Adjusted prevalence of synthetic cathinone use decreased more across time than prevalence based on self-report (a 79.4 % vs. 69.1 % decrease) and adjusted report for MDA use decreased more than prevalence based on self-report (a 50.6 % vs. 38.9 % decrease). CONCLUSIONS/UNASSIGNED:Combining self-report and toxicology tests helped us determine that decreases in drug use/exposure were steeper regarding adjusted prevalence. Underreported drug exposure-possibly due to exposure to adulterants-appears to have had less of an effect on prevalence in 2022 than it did in 2016.
PMCID:10665664
PMID: 38023341
ISSN: 2772-7246
CID: 5617202

Trends in past-month cannabis use among US adults across a range of disabilities and health conditions, 2015-2019

Yang, Kevin H; Tam, Rowena M; Satybaldiyeva, Nora; Kepner, Wayne; Han, Benjamin H; Moore, Alison A; Palamar, Joseph J
INTRODUCTION/BACKGROUND:While there is increasing interest in the use of cannabis to manage a range of health-related symptoms, little is known about trends in recent cannabis use with respect to various health conditions. METHODS:We examined data from a US representative sample of noninstitutionalized adults age ≥ 18 from the 2015-2019 National Survey on Drug Use and Health (N = 214,505). We estimated the pooled prevalences followed by linear time trends, overall, and by disability (i.e., difficulty hearing, seeing, thinking, walking, dressing, doing errands) and lifetime (i.e., bronchitis, cancer, diabetes, hepatitis, kidney disease) and current (i.e., asthma, depression, heart disease, hypertension) health condition status using logistic regression. Models with year-by-condition status interaction terms were used to assess differential time trends, adjusting for demographic characteristics. RESULTS:From 2015 to 2019, cannabis use increased significantly among adults with and without each disability and health condition examined. However, the increase was more rapid among those with (versus without) difficulty hearing (89.8% increase [4.9% to 9.3%] vs. 37.9% increase [8.7% to 12.0%], p = 0.015), difficulty walking (84.1% increase [6.3% to 11.6%] vs. 36.8% increase [8.7% to 11.9%], p < 0.001), 2-3 impairments (75.3% increase [9.3% to 16.3%] vs. 36.6% increase [8.2% to 11.2%], p = 0.041), and kidney disease (135.3% increase [3.4% to 8.0%] vs. 38.4% increase [8.6% to 11.9%], p = 0.045). CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Given the potential adverse effects of cannabis, prevention and harm reduction efforts should focus on groups at increasingly higher risk for use, including those with disabilities and kidney disease.
PMID: 37951542
ISSN: 1096-0260
CID: 5612862

A multivariable analysis delineating hair color, hair dyeing, and hat wearing as predictors of level of cocaine and MDMA detection in human hair samples

Palamar, Joseph J; Cleland, Charles M; Vincenti, Marco; Salomone, Alberto
Research suggests that hair color, hair dyeing, and perspiration can bias hair test results regarding drug exposure, but research is needed to examine such associations in a multivariable manner. In this epidemiology study, adults were surveyed entering nightclubs and dance festivals in New York City, and 328 provided hair samples, which were analyzed using ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry to determine the level of detection of cocaine and 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA). Reporting use was not an inclusion criterion for analysis. We used two-part multivariable models to delineate associations of hair color, past-year hair dyeing, and frequency of past-month hat wearing (which may increase perspiration) in relation to any vs. no detection of cocaine and MDMA as well as level of detection, controlling for hair length, self-reported past-year cocaine/ecstasy/MDMA use, and age, sex, and race/ethnicity. Those reporting having dyed their hair were at increased odds of having any level of cocaine detected (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] = 3.75, 95% CI confidence interval [CI]: 1.85-6.70), and compared to those with brown hair, those with blond(e) hair on average had lower levels of cocaine (ng/mg) detected (beta = -7.97, p = 0.025). Those reporting having dyed their hair were at increased odds of having any level of MDMA detected (aOR = 3.05, 95% CI: 1.44-6.48), and compared to those who reported never wearing a hat, those who reported wearing a hat daily or almost daily on average had lower levels of MDMA (ng/mg) detected (beta = -6.61, p = 0.025). This study demonstrates the importance of using multivariable models to delineate predictors of drug detection.
PMID: 37986705
ISSN: 1942-7611
CID: 5608392

Trends in Characteristics of Prescription Opioid-related Poisonings among Older Adults in the United States, 2015-2021

Han, Benjamin H; Jewell, Jennifer S; Ding, Belicia K; Wu, Nicholas C; Cottler, Linda B; Palamar, Joseph J
OBJECTIVES:Few studies have considered how trends in opioid poisonings have changed among older adults. The objective of this study was to examine trends in fatal and nonfatal opioid-related poisonings ("exposures") among older adults. METHODS:National poison center data were used to examine trends in characteristics of reported exposures to commonly prescribed opioids between 2015 and 2021 among adults 60 years or older. We estimated the proportion of opioid exposures by demographic characteristics, the specific opioid(s) involved, exposure type, route of administration, other substances co-used, and medical outcomes for each calendar year. We estimated whether there were linear changes in prevalence by year using logistic regression. RESULTS:Although there was a decrease in the number of opioid exposures within the study population from 7706 in 2015 to 7337 in 2021 (a 4.8% decrease, P = 0.04), exposures increased for adults aged 70 to 79 years (a 14.0% increase, P < 0.001). The proportion classified as "abuse" increased by 63.3% ( P < 0.001). There were significant decreases in the proportion involving hydromorphone (a 23.3% decrease, P < 0.001) and morphine (a 22.0% decrease, P < 0.001), with an increase involving buprenorphine (a 216.0% increase, P < 0.001). The proportion increased for co-use of cocaine (a 488.9% increase, P < 0.001) and methamphetamine (a 220.0% increase, P = 0.02), with a decrease in co-use of benzodiazepines (a 25.5% decrease, P < 0.001). The proportion of major medical outcomes increased by 93.9% ( P < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS:National patterns of opioid-related poisonings are shifting among older adults, including the types of opioids involved and co-use of other drugs. These results can inform prevention and harm reduction efforts aimed at older adults.
PMID: 37934539
ISSN: 1935-3227
CID: 5590352