4.4 Article

Xylazine spreads across the US: A growing component of the increasingly synthetic and polysubstance overdose crisis

Journal

DRUG AND ALCOHOL DEPENDENCE
Volume 233, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2022.109380

Keywords

Xylazine; Overdose; Ethnography; Mixed methods; Drug Surveillance

Funding

  1. UCLA Medical Scientist Training Program (National Institute of General Medical Sciences) [GM008042]
  2. National Institute on Drug Abuse [K08-DA048163-03, T32-DA035165, K01DA050771]
  3. National Institute of Health

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This study found that xylazine is increasingly present in overdose deaths in the US, primarily linked to illicitly-manufactured fentanyls. The highest prevalence was observed in Philadelphia, and individuals who inject drugs described xylazine as an adulterant that lengthens the duration of fentanyl injections but also increases the risk of soft tissue infection and naloxone-resistant overdose.
Background: Sharp exacerbations of the US overdose crisis are linked to polysubstance use of synthetic compounds. Xylazine is a veterinary tranquilizer, long noted in the street opioid supply of Puerto Rico, and more recently Philadelphia. Yet its national trends, geographic distribution, and health risks are poorly characterized. Methods: In this sequential mixed-methods study, xylazine was increasingly observed by ethnographers in Philadelphia among drug-sellers and people who inject drugs (PWID). Subsequently, we systematically searched for records describing xylazine-present overdose mortality across the US and assessed time trends and overlap with other drugs. Results: In 10 jurisdictions - representing all four US Census Regions - xylazine was increasingly present in overdose deaths, rising from 0.36% of deaths in 015m 6.7% in 2020. The highest xylazine prevalence data was observed in Philadelphia, (25.8% of deaths), followed by Maryland (19.3%) and Connecticut (10.2%). Illicitly-manufactured-fentanyls were present in 98.4% of xylazine-present-overdose-deaths - suggesting a strong ecological link - as well as cocaine (45.4%), benzodiazepines (28.4%), heroin (23.3%), and alcohol (19.7%). PWID in Philadelphia described xylazine as a sought-after adulterant that lengthens the short duration of fentanyl injections. They also linked it to increased risk of soft tissue infection and naloxone-resistant overdose. Conclusions: Xylazine is increasingly present in overdose deaths, linked to the proliferation of illicitly-manufactured-fentanyls. Ethnographic accounts associate it with profound risks for PWID. Nevertheless, many jurisdictions do not routinely test for xylazine, and it is not comprehensively tracked nationally. Further efforts are needed to provide PWID with services that can help minimize additional risks associated with a shifting drug supply.

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