.

  • Written by Christopher P. Holstege, Professor of Emergency Medicine and Pediatrics, University of Virginia
Nitazenes are a powerful class of street drugs emerging across the US

Two deaths in Boulder County, Colorado, in 2023[1] are the latest in the U.S. to be blamed on the powerful class of synthetic opioids called nitazenes. Most health systems cannot detect nitazenes, so the exact number of overdoses is unknown, but they’re implicated in more than 200 deaths[2] in Europe and North America since 2019, including 11 in Colorado since 2021[3]. One of the two Boulder County deaths is linked to a new formulation called N-Desethyl etonitazene, which was identified by a national laboratory[4], and is thought to be the first related death.

The Conversation interviewed Dr. Christopher Holstege[5], professor of emergency medicine and pediatrics at the University of Virginia School of Medicine and director of the Blue Ridge Poison Center, where opioid overdoses are increasing. He explains why nitazenes are so potent and deadly.

What are nitazenes?

Nitazenes are a class of synthetic opioids that contains more than 20 unique compounds, including isotonitazene[6], which was first identified in 2019 and is known on the streets as ISO. It also includes protonitazene, metonitazene and etonitazene.

Nitazenes are psychoactive substances, or “designer drugs,”[7] that aren’t controlled by any laws or conventions but pose significant health risk[8] to the public. These substances have recently surfaced as illegal street drugs.

Researchers have relatively little information on how the human body reacts to nitazenes because the drugs have never gone through clinical trials. But lab tests show certain nitazenes could be hundreds to thousands of times more potent[9] than morphine and 10 to 40 times stronger than fentanyl.

The U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency has classified many formulations of nitazenes as Schedule 1 drugs under the Controlled Substances Act[10], meaning they have no medical use and have a high risk of abuse.

When were nitazenes first developed?

Nitazenes were initially developed in the 1950s[11] by the pharmaceutical research laboratories of the Swiss chemical company CIBA Aktiengesellschaft. It synthesized numerous substances in the drug class to be used as painkillers.

However, nitazenes were never approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for medical use in humans[12]. They were nearly forgotten outside of specialized research circles until they reemerged as street drugs in 2019. As law enforcement has cracked down on other drugs such as fentanyl, illegal labs have used historical pharmacology research[13] to formulate analogs of nitazenes as street drugs.

Since 2019, at least six formulas[14] have come from the original patent, but others, like the one detected in Boulder, are brand new. Specialized lab testing[15] is required to identify nitazenes in toxicology samples, and fentanyl test strips can’t detect nitazene analogs[16].

But since first being detected[17], nitazenes have been blamed for 200 drug-related overdose deaths[18] in Europe and the United States. Although nitazenes are now identified as illegal street drugs in numerous countries, many medical providers aren’t even aware they exist[19].

Blue pills on a black background
Isotonitazene has shown up in pill form mixed with other drugs such as oxycodone. DEA, CC BY[20][21]

What types of nitazenes are showing up on the streets?

Nitazene first appeared in 2019 in the Midwest as a white powdery substance[22] similar to cocaine. It later appeared[23] on the streets of Washington, D.C., as yellow, brown and white powders. Since 2022, the DEA has found other types of nitazenes in both powder and blue tablet forms[24].

Nitazenes are also mixed with other street drugs[25] such as heroin and fentanyl and with fake oxycodone pills, without users knowing it.

The Justice Department has indicted several companies in China[26], alleging that they ship the raw chemicals to make nitazenes to Mexico and the U.S., where they get mixed by cartels and traffickers, then distributed on the streets.

What are signs of a nitazene overdose?

The toxic effects of nitazene resemble those associated with other classic opioids such as morphine and fentanyl and include small pupils and slowing of the respiratory and central nervous systems, which can lead to death.

Because of the potency of the nitazenes, symptoms can develop rapidly after someone is exposed, killing them before they can get medical care.

Does naloxone counteract the effects of overdose?

Naloxone, commonly known as Narcan[27], is reportedly effective[28] in reversing overdoses due to nitazene, but larger and multiple doses might be required[29].

References

  1. ^ Two deaths in Boulder County, Colorado, in 2023 (bouldercounty.gov)
  2. ^ more than 200 deaths (doi.org)
  3. ^ 11 in Colorado since 2021 (cdn.theconversation.com)
  4. ^ identified by a national laboratory (www.cfsre.org)
  5. ^ Dr. Christopher Holstege (scholar.google.com)
  6. ^ including isotonitazene (www.dea.gov)
  7. ^ “designer drugs,” (doi.org)
  8. ^ pose significant health risk (www.unodc.org)
  9. ^ hundreds to thousands of times more potent (doi.org)
  10. ^ Schedule 1 drugs under the Controlled Substances Act (www.federalregister.gov)
  11. ^ developed in the 1950s (www.deadiversion.usdoj.gov)
  12. ^ for medical use in humans (doi.org)
  13. ^ historical pharmacology research (doi.org)
  14. ^ at least six formulas (doi.org)
  15. ^ Specialized lab testing (doi.org)
  16. ^ fentanyl test strips can’t detect nitazene analogs (www.ccsa.ca)
  17. ^ first being detected (doi.org)
  18. ^ 200 drug-related overdose deaths (doi.org)
  19. ^ even aware they exist (doi.org)
  20. ^ DEA (www.dea.gov)
  21. ^ CC BY (creativecommons.org)
  22. ^ white powdery substance (www.federalregister.gov)
  23. ^ It later appeared (www.dea.gov)
  24. ^ powder and blue tablet forms (www.federalregister.gov)
  25. ^ mixed with other street drugs (www.federalregister.gov)
  26. ^ companies in China (www.justice.gov)
  27. ^ known as Narcan (theconversation.com)
  28. ^ reportedly effective (www.cdc.gov)
  29. ^ multiple doses might be required (www.cdc.gov)

Authors: Christopher P. Holstege, Professor of Emergency Medicine and Pediatrics, University of Virginia

Read more https://theconversation.com/nitazenes-are-a-powerful-class-of-street-drugs-emerging-across-the-us-222244

Metropolitan republishes selected articles from The Conversation USA with permission

Visit The Conversation to see more