UK synthetic opioid deaths may be as high as 500 more than initially thought, research suggests, with some regions experiencing a third more fatalities than reported due to degradation of the potent substance during postmortem tests.
A study by researchers at King's College London found that nitazene, a synthetic opioid hundreds of times stronger than heroin, was often undetectable in toxicology tests due to its unstable nature. This means that many cases may be being missed, leading to an undercounting of the true number of deaths caused by these potent opioids.
The UK National Crime Agency had previously reported 333 fatalities linked to nitazene, but the researchers say this figure is likely to be low and that the actual number could be significantly higher. The study found that only 14% of the nitazene present at the time of overdose remained detectable in real-world pathology and toxicology samples.
The excess deaths in Birmingham in 2023, attributed to the non-detection of nitazene by toxicologists, highlights the issue of incomplete data. Dr Caroline Copeland, lead author of the study, warned that this undercounting has serious implications for harm reduction strategies, stating that "if we don't measure a problem properly, we don't design the right interventions โ and the inevitable consequence is that preventable deaths will continue."
The findings come as synthetic opioids become an increasingly public health concern in the UK, with Scotland facing a fresh drug deaths crisis due to highly potent synthetic opioids already linked to over 100 fatalities. The research has sparked calls for the government to be more proactive in rolling out drug testing and overdose prevention measures to save lives.
"It's clear that the extreme potency of nitazenes has contributed to rising overdose and death rates amongst people who use drugs," said Mike Trace, chief executive of the Forward Trust. "This research shows the official numbers are probably underestimates, supporting our calls for the government to be braver in providing lifesaving health services to people taking illegal drugs."
A study by researchers at King's College London found that nitazene, a synthetic opioid hundreds of times stronger than heroin, was often undetectable in toxicology tests due to its unstable nature. This means that many cases may be being missed, leading to an undercounting of the true number of deaths caused by these potent opioids.
The UK National Crime Agency had previously reported 333 fatalities linked to nitazene, but the researchers say this figure is likely to be low and that the actual number could be significantly higher. The study found that only 14% of the nitazene present at the time of overdose remained detectable in real-world pathology and toxicology samples.
The excess deaths in Birmingham in 2023, attributed to the non-detection of nitazene by toxicologists, highlights the issue of incomplete data. Dr Caroline Copeland, lead author of the study, warned that this undercounting has serious implications for harm reduction strategies, stating that "if we don't measure a problem properly, we don't design the right interventions โ and the inevitable consequence is that preventable deaths will continue."
The findings come as synthetic opioids become an increasingly public health concern in the UK, with Scotland facing a fresh drug deaths crisis due to highly potent synthetic opioids already linked to over 100 fatalities. The research has sparked calls for the government to be more proactive in rolling out drug testing and overdose prevention measures to save lives.
"It's clear that the extreme potency of nitazenes has contributed to rising overdose and death rates amongst people who use drugs," said Mike Trace, chief executive of the Forward Trust. "This research shows the official numbers are probably underestimates, supporting our calls for the government to be braver in providing lifesaving health services to people taking illegal drugs."