new psychoactive substances - analysing the problem

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New psychoactive substances Analysing the problem New drugs Roumen Sedefov European Economic and Social Committee, Public Hearing, 27 November 2013

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Presentation by Roumen Sedefov (European Monitoring Center for Drug and Drug Addictions (EMCDDA)) on the occasion of the EESC hearing on New Psychoactive Substances (Brussels, 27 November 2013)

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Page 1: New psychoactive substances - analysing the problem

New psychoactive substances Analysing the problem

New drugs

Roumen SedefovEuropean Economic and Social Committee, Public Hearing, 27 November 2013

Page 2: New psychoactive substances - analysing the problem

I will ask and maybe answer…

• What are NPS and what do we know about them?

• Why should we be concerned about them?

• What information do we need in order to respond effectively to them?

Page 3: New psychoactive substances - analysing the problem

From designer drugs to legal highsHow did we get here? The role of globalisation and innovation

Page 4: New psychoactive substances - analysing the problem

The new drug phenomenon in the EU todayFour broad and overlapping groups

• Designer drugs: produced in clandestine labs and sold on illicit drug market as replacements for ‘ecstasy’ or ‘speed’ or heroin. Users mostly unaware that they are taking them

• Legal highs: produced by chemical companies and sold on open market, often as branded products in sophisticated packaging. Sold on the Internet, in head shops and by street-level drug dealers

• Dietary supplements: sold on open market aimed at people going to the gym, looking to loose weight. Sold on Amazon and eBay

Limited data on toxicity and harms

• Medicines: diverted within Europe or imported

Page 5: New psychoactive substances - analysing the problem

Huge growth in number, type and availability303 new drugs notified 2005–2013, 67 notified in 2013 so far…

More than 200 have been notified since 2010

Page 6: New psychoactive substances - analysing the problem

Types of products & users are also broadening out…

• Traditionally most new drugs were marketed to ‘recreational’ users: psychonauts, early adopters (dance music fans)

• Diffusion may have then spread to the broader population (e.g. mephedrone)

• Now seeing both branded and unbranded products used by:

• lifestyle users: gym-goers (‘Craze’, DMAA), weight loss, other enhancement reasons (phenibut)

• problematic users: IV opioid injectors using stimulants (mephedrone and MDPV) or fentanyls (ocfentanyl, carfentanyl)

• self-medication (overlap with all user groups): e.g. importation of non-controlled benzodiazepines from outside EU

Page 7: New psychoactive substances - analysing the problem

Seizures of synthetic cannabinoidsMulti-kilogram quantities usually shipped from China

Amount Cannabinoid Date

54 kg JWH-018 quinolinylcarboxylate derivative Nov 2012

7 kg JWH-018 carboxamide derivative Jul 2012

5 kg JWH-073 Aug 2012

21 kg JWH-018 adamantyl carboxamide derivative Jul 2012

10 kg 5F-UR-144 Jan 2013

20 kg AM-2201 Jan 2013

Page 8: New psychoactive substances - analysing the problem

Processing and packaging in EuropePotent synthetic cannabinoids sold as 'herbal' smoking mixtures

Page 9: New psychoactive substances - analysing the problem

Internet shops and bricks and mortar shopsThe Internet plays a key role in shaping the market

693 online shops identified in 2012 selling to EU

Page 10: New psychoactive substances - analysing the problem

Lifetime use of 'legal highs' in the EU15–24 year olds, percentage by country, n > 12000

In certain countries some new substances that imitate the effects of illicit drugs are being sold as legal substances in the form of - for example - powders, tablets/pills or herbs. Have you ever used such substances?

Page 11: New psychoactive substances - analysing the problem

Mephedrone…Last year use in the United Kingdom

2010/11:

Ages 16-24: 4.4% ~ cocaine, the second most used drug

Ages 16-59: 1.4% ~ ecstasy, the third most used drug

2011/12:

Ages 16-24: 3.3% ~ ecstasy, the third most used drug

Ages 16-59: 1.1%

Page 12: New psychoactive substances - analysing the problem

Do NPS have other uses?Examples…

• Medicines: phenazepam, GHB, pregabalin, etizolam, carfentanil, ketamine

• Intermediates for synthesis of API: mCPP, 2-AI, other?

(both groups excluded from risk assessment and control at EU level)

• Industrial chemicals: GBL, 1,4 BD

• Scientific research & developmental, potential medicines?

Page 13: New psychoactive substances - analysing the problem

4-MA and 5-IT: risk assessed in 2013 and subject to controls

25I-NBOMe: phenethylamine, often sold as LSD, large seizures of blotters, seizures of bulk powders (China)

• Identified in 14 countries, 30+ non-fatal intoxications reported, some very serious

AH-7921: synthetic opioid, sold as ‘research chemical’

• Identified in 6 countries, 10 deaths reported

MDPV: synthetic cathinone, sold as ‘legal high’, ‘research chemical’, and on illicit drug market

• Identified in 17 countries, large seizures, 40 deaths reported

Methoxetamine: ketamine derivative, sold as ‘legal high’, ’research chemical’ and on illicit market as ketamine

• Identified in 12 countries, 9 deaths reported

Detecting and responding to harmsEWS is an event-based monitoring system allowing early detection of signals of harm

Page 14: New psychoactive substances - analysing the problem

• Toxicovigilance: acute emergencies, poisons centres, deaths

• Better epidemiological data across the board

• Better understanding of motives of use and models of diffusion potential and interplay with illicit drug market

• Internet monitoring

• Better detail on major production sites and seizures

• Producer countries and trends in production

• Availability and trends at global level

Knowledge gaps and areas that require strengthening

Page 15: New psychoactive substances - analysing the problem

EMCDDA

[email protected]

www.emcdda.europa.eu/drug-situation/new-drugs