Abstract
Background and aims
It is widely believed that the 2018 decline in overdose deaths in the United States was attributable to a range of public health interventions; however, this decline also coincided with the regulation and decline in use of potent fentanyl analogs, especially carfentanil. The aim of this study was to investigate the association between overdose deaths and carfentanil availability in the United States.
Design
Secondary analysis of drug overdose deaths from the Center for Disease Control and carfentanil exhibit data from drug seizures submitted to drug crime labs and published by the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). Trends in overdose deaths were compared in states with high carfentanil exhibits with states with low or no carfentanil exhibits.
Setting
United States.
Cases
A total of 1,035,923 drug overdose death records in the United States from 1979 through 2019 were studied.
Measurements
The outcomes studied were number of overdose deaths and mortality rates by state.
Findings
Drug overdose deaths have been closely tracking along an exponential curve. The years 2016 and 2017 witnessed a hyper‐exponential surge with increases in overdose deaths of 11,228 (+21.4%), and 6,605 (+10.4%), respectively. Subsequently in 2018, drug overdose deaths declined by ‐2,870 (‐4.1%). This rise and then fall coincided with a surge and then decline in carfentanil drug seizure exhibits during these same years: 0 (2015), 1292 (2016), 5,857 (2017) and 804 (2018). The majority of carfentanil exhibits were localized to a few states. The 2018 decline in overdose deaths in the top five states with the greatest spike in carfentanil exhibits in 2017 (Ohio, Florida, Pennsylvania, Kentucky and Michigan) was 2,848, which accounted for nearly all of the total US decline.
Conclusions
The 2016‐2017 acceleration and then 2018 decline in drug overdose deaths in the United States was associated with the sudden rise and then fall of carfentanil availability. Given the regional variation, carfentanil’s decreased availability may have contributed to the reduction in overdose deaths in 2018.