4.4 Article

Biosurveillance of Drug Overdoses and Substance Misuse Treated in Selected Emergency Departments in Minnesota, 2017-2020

Journal

PUBLIC HEALTH REPORTS
Volume 136, Issue 1_SUPPL, Pages 87S-95S

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/00333549211042834

Keywords

toxicology; surveillance; drug overdose; substance misuse

Funding

  1. Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists
  2. Substance Abuse/Mental Health pilot
  3. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Enhanced State Opioid Overdose Surveillance and Overdose Prevention in States Surge Support

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This study describes the Minnesota Drug Overdose and Substance Use Pilot Surveillance Activity, which collected data on emergency department (ED) visits related to DOSM, focusing on toxicology results. Results showed that methamphetamine was most frequently detected, with discrepancies between suspected substances and actual findings, highlighting patients' exposure to multiple substances.
Objectives: Increasing knowledge about the toxicology of drug overdose and substance misuse (DOSM) is important in improving our understanding of the epidemic. We describe the Minnesota Drug Overdose and Substance Use Pilot Surveillance Activity, which started collecting data on emergency department (ED) visits attributable to DOSM in 2017, with a focus on the toxicology results of a subset of clinical encounters. Methods: From November 1, 2017, through January 30, 2020, we collected near-real-time data on DOSM-related ED encounters. The Minnesota Department of Health Public Health Laboratory tested leftover clinical specimens (blood and/or urine) for the presence of various substances for patients who died, were hospitalized, had an atypical clinical presentation, or were part of a local drug overdose cluster. Testing looked for >250 drugs or their metabolites, including those commonly misused (eg, methamphetamine, cocaine), prescription medications, synthetic cannabinoids and cathinones, and opioids. We describe characteristics of the overall group and a subgroup of clinical encounters with toxicology results. Results: Specimens submitted from 6 EDs during the study period represented 239 clinical encounters. Methamphetamine was the most frequently detected substance (67.4%) but was suspected in only 45.6% of encounters. At least 1 opioid was detected in 42.5% of encounters but suspected in only 29.7%. Testing also detected potential adulterants and additives (eg, fentanyl, fentanyl analogues, levamisole) and showed frequent patient exposure to substances not reported by patients or suspected by clinicians. Nearly half (44.4%) of clinical encounters had >1 substance detected. Conclusions: ED surveillance for DOSM encounters, enhanced by toxicology testing, can provide local situational awareness on overdoses, prevent potential mischaracterization of the true drug overdose epidemic, and inform harm reduction and drug overdose prevention efforts.

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