Illicit Drug Users Turn to Cannabis as ‘Safe Supply’ Option  

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

The cannabis industry and its advocates have long said that medical marijuana could help solve the opioid crisis by reducing demand for prescription opioids. While the evidence for that claim is somewhat mixed, a new study suggests that cannabis may be useful in reducing demand for illicit opioids, such as fentanyl.

Researchers at UCLA and the British Columbia Centre on Substance Use surveyed 205 people in Vancouver, BC who use cannabis and “unregulated opioids” obtained on the black market. In recent years, Vancouver has become a laboratory for harm reduction programs aimed at reducing overdoses, such as “safe supply” sites that offer prescription opioids and injectable heroin to drug users.  

The survey findings, published in the International Journal of Drug Policy, found that almost half the participants used cannabis to manage their opioid cravings and nearly 58% reported decreasing their opioid use. Researchers say the association between cannabis and harm reduction was “mainly driven by those living with moderate to severe pain.”

“These findings indicate that cannabis use to manage opioid cravings is a prevalent motivation for cannabis use among PWUO (people who use unregulated opioids) and is associated with self-assessed reductions in opioid use during periods of cannabis use,” wrote lead author Hudson Reddon, PhD, a Postdoctoral Fellow at the BC Centre on Substance Use.

The study is believed to be the first to investigate if illicit drug users can successfully manage their opioid cravings with cannabis. If the findings are confirmed, it could broaden access to cannabis as a harm reduction measure.

A previous survey of illicit drug users by the BC Centre on Substance Use found that about 1 in 4 used cannabis for harm reduction. About half used cannabis as a substitute for cocaine, methamphetamine and other stimulants (50%) and nearly a third used it as a substitute for illicit opioids (31%). Other reasons for using cannabis include coming off of other drugs (25%), substitution for a legal substance (15%), and as a treatment for withdrawal (15%).

“Given the increasing harm of the drug toxicity crisis and ongoing maturation of the regulated cannabis market in Canada, evaluating how cannabis use patterns, such as substitution, impact opioid use behaviours will be important to inform public health and policy responses to mitigate the harms of opioid use and evolving cannabis access,” Reddon wrote.

“Increasing the accessibility of cannabis products for therapeutic use may be a useful supplementary strategy to mitigate exposure to unregulated opioids and associated harm during the ongoing drug toxicity crisis.”

Can Cannabis Be Used to Treat Opioid Addiction?

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

Canadian researchers – with funding from U.S. taxpayers – are proposing a novel treatment for opioid use disorder: Cannabis.

In a paper published in the journal Drug and Alcohol Dependence, researchers from the University of British Columbia (UBC) and the BC Centre on Substance Use (BCCSU) say cannabis could help people being treated for opioid addiction by reducing their risk of exposure to illicit fentanyl and other street drugs.

The finding is based on urine drug tests of 819 people being treated for opioid addiction in Vancouver, BC, the first major city in North America to experience an outbreak of fentanyl-related overdoses. Addiction treatment usually involves taking opioid agonist drugs (OATs) such as buprenorphine or methadone.

The researchers found that over half the participants (53%) tested positive for fentanyl, suggesting they were still using street drugs. Those who tested positive for THC -- the psychoactive compound in cannabis -- were about 10 percent less likely to have fentanyl in their urine.

"These new findings suggest that cannabis could have a stabilizing impact for many patients on treatment, while also reducing the risk of overdose," said lead author Eugenia Socías, MD, a clinician scientist at BCCSU. "With overdoses continuing to rise across the country, these findings highlight the urgent need for clinical research to evaluate the therapeutic potential of cannabinoids as adjunctive treatment to OAT to address the escalating opioid overdose epidemic."

Socias and her colleagues say cannabis may play an important role in keeping people in addiction treatment programs. Previous research at BCCSU found that drug users initiating OAT who used cannabis daily were about 21 percent more likely to be retained in treatment after six months than non-cannabis users. People who stay in treatment face much lower risks of dying from an overdose, acquiring HIV or suffering other harms of drug use.

‘Gateway Drug’

The research at UBC and BCCSU was funded, in part, by grants from the U.S. National Institute on Drug Abuse, which is part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

The NIH has taken a dim view of cannabis in the past, calling marijuana a “gateway drug” for some users, particularly adolescents. A 2015 study funded by NIH found that nearly a third of those who use marijuana develop some degree of marijuana use disorder.

“Whether smoking or otherwise consuming marijuana has therapeutic benefits that outweigh its health risks is still an open question that science has not resolved,” said Nora Volkow, MD, Director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse.

Public health officials in British Columbia have proposed some controversial solutions to the opioid crisis, including decriminalization of all illicit drugs. A treatment center in Vancouver currently provides diacetylmorphine -- prescription heroin – to drug users to keep them from using street heroin that is often laced with fentanyl, a synthethic opioid that is 50 to 100 times more potent than morphine.

The Canadian Institutes of Health Research recently approved funding for a pilot study in Vancouver to evaluate cannabis as an adjunct therapy to OAT.

"Scientists are only just beginning to understand the role cannabis might play in supporting people's well-being, particularly those who use other substances," said co-author M-J Milloy, PhD, the Canopy Growth professor of cannabis science at UBC. "This study will help us understand if and how cannabis might have a role in addressing the overdose crisis."

Only 2% of British Columbia Overdoses Linked to Prescription Opioids

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

A new analysis of fatal opioid overdoses in British Columbia found that only about 2% of the deaths were caused by prescription opioids alone. The other overdoses mainly involved illicit fentanyl and other street drugs or a combination of illicit drugs and other medications, which were often not prescribed.

“Our data show a high prevalence of nonprescribed fentanyl and stimulants, and a low prevalence of prescribed opioids detected on toxicology in people who died from illicit drug overdose. These results suggest that strategies to address the current overdose crisis in Canada must do much more than target deprescribing of opioids,” researchers reported in the Canadian Medical Association Journal (CMAJ).

Vancouver, British Columbia was the first major North American city to be hit by a wave of overdoses involving illicit fentanyl, a potent synthetic opioid. A public health emergency was declared in BC in 2016 and strict guidelines were released to limit opioid prescribing. Although prescriptions dropped dramatically, fatal overdoses in BC continued to rise.

Researchers looked at 1,789 fatal overdoses in BC from 2015 to 2017 for which toxicology reports were available and found that 85% of them involved an opioid. Of those, only 2.4% of the deaths were linked to opioid medication alone. Another 7.8% of cases involved a combination of prescribed or non-prescribed opioids.

The findings are similar to a 2019 study of opioid overdoses in Massachusetts, which found that only 1.3% of the people who died had an active prescription for opioid medication.   

“Pain patients and their medications have never been responsible for overdose deaths – not then or now. Will the anti-opiate zealots, with all their data-dredged studies be taken to task for all the unnecessary suffering, disability, and premature deaths they have contributed to within the Canadian pain population?” asked Barry Ulmer, Executive Director of the Chronic Pain Association of Canada, a patient advocacy group.

“The ‘prohibition’ approach that has wrongly been applied for years that focused on reducing access to pharmaceutical products directly contributed to exposure to higher risk illicit substances, which put people at risk of overdose.”

Most Overdoses Linked to Illicit Fentanyl

Researchers say efforts to reduce opioid prescribing in Canada were “insufficient to address the current overdose crisis” because street drugs are involved in the vast majority of deaths. They also warned against the forced tapering of patients on opioid pain medication.

“The risk of harms from these medications must be balanced with the potential harms of nonconsensual discontinuation of opioids for long-term users, including increased pain, risk of suicide and risk of transition to the toxic illicit drug supply,” wrote lead author Alexis Crabtree, MD, resident physician in Public Health at the University of British Columbia.  

Crabtree and her colleagues found that most overdoses involved a street drug, with fentanyl or fentanyl analogues linked to nearly 8 out of 10 overdose deaths. Many of the deaths involved multiple substances, including medications such as stimulants, anti-depressants, benzodiazepines, antipsychotics and gabapentinoids, which were often not prescribed to the victim.   

Over 7% of the overdoses involved methadone or buprenorphine (Suboxone), opioids that are used to treat addiction. About a third of the people who died had a diagnosis of substance use disorder in the year before their overdose.

In a commentary also published in CMAJ, a leading public health expert said it was time to decriminalize drugs and offer a “safe supply” to illicit drug users.

Unless there is a radical change in our approach to the epidemic, overdose deaths will continue unabated. It is time to scale up safe supply and decriminalize drug use.
— Dr. Mark Tyndall

“Unless there is a radical change in our approach to the epidemic, overdose deaths will continue unabated. It is time to scale up safe supply and decriminalize drug use,” wrote Mark Tyndall, MD, Executive Director of BC Centre for Disease Control and a professor at the School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia.

Tyndall says blaming the opioid crisis on excess prescribing by doctors and the unethical marketing of opioids by pharmaceutical companies fails to address the reasons people abuse drugs in the first place.

“While having a cheap and ready supply of opioid drugs does allow for misuse and addiction, this narrative fails to acknowledge that drug use is largely demand-driven by people seeking to self-medicate to deal with trauma, physical pain, emotional pain, isolation, mental illness and a range of other personal challenges and these are the people overdosing,” Tyndall wrote.

(Update: Canada’s Chief Public Health Officer, Dr. Theresa Tam, issued a statement August 26 saying the COVID-19 pandemic is contributing to an increase in drug overdoses and deaths across Canada.

“There are indications that the street drug supply is growing more unpredictable and toxic in some parts of the country, as previous supply chains have been disrupted by travel restrictions and border measures. Public health measures designed to reduce the impact of COVID-19 may increase isolation, stress and anxiety as well as put a strain on the supports for persons who use drugs,” Tam said.

“For the third consecutive month this year, the number of drug overdose deaths recorded in British Columbia has exceeded 170. These deaths represent a 136% increase over the number of deaths recorded in July 2019. There are news reports of an increase in overdoses in other communities across the country.” )

Study: Using Cannabis for Pain Relief Reduces Risk of Opioid Overdose

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

Illicit drug users who use cannabis for pain relief are less likely to experience an opioid overdose or use heroin, according to a Canadian study recently published in the online journal PLOS ONE.

Researchers at the University of British Columbia (UBC) the BC Centre on Substance Use (BCCSU) interviewed nearly 900 illicit drug users in Vancouver who reported using cannabis between 2016 and 2018. Participants were asked whether they used cannabis to relieve pain, improve sleep, address nausea or for recreation. Most said they used cannabis for a medically therapeutic reason.

"We're seeing more and more in our research that people are using cannabis for therapeutic reasons," says lead author Stephanie Lake, a doctoral candidate at UBC's School of Population and Public Health. "We're also seeing that, for some individuals in our study, this therapeutic use corresponds with either less use of illicit opioids or a reduced risk of overdose."

Participants who used cannabis for pain relief had lower odds of a non-fatal opioid overdose and for injecting heroin daily. Previous research from the BCCSU found that many people at risk of overdose, particularly those living with pain, may be using cannabis to reduce their reliance on illicit opioids.

Another key finding of the study was that therapeutic cannabis users relied on illicit sources for their cannabis supply – even though medical marijuana was fully legalized in Canada in 2013. About half of study participants said that illegal dispensaries were their most important source of cannabis.

"The mounting evidence related to the motivations behind people's cannabis use strongly suggests that improving access to cannabis for therapeutic purposes could help reduce overdose risk associated with illicit opioid use," says M.J. Milloy, PhD, a research scientist at BCCSU who was senior author of the study.

"Authorities should pause their efforts to close unregulated sources of cannabis and eliminate the illicit market until barriers to legal cannabis are addressed, especially during the overdose crisis."

Vancouver was the first major North American city to be hit by a wave of overdoses involving illicit fentanyl, heroin and other street drugs. A public health emergency was declared in British Columbia in 2016. Since then, Vancouver has become a laboratory of sorts for novel ways at addressing addiction, such as providing a “safe supply” of prescription opioids and prescription heroin to illicit drug users.

“Our community and many others across Canada and the United States are experiencing an opioid overdose crisis rooted, in part, in inadequately or inappropriately-managed chronic pain and sparked by widespread exposure to an unregulated illicit opioid supply contaminated with potent opioid analogues,” researchers concluded. “Our finding may also reflect an opioid-sparing effect of cannabis, whereby opioids are not replaced, but the dosage or frequency of opioid required for analgesia is reduced with the use of cannabis.”

Other studies have debunked the idea that medical cannabis reduces opioid use. Two large studies published last year found no evidence that legalizing cannabis reduces prescription opioid use, overdose or mortality.

“We tested this relationship and found no evidence that the passage of medical marijuana laws — even in states with dispensaries — was associated with a decrease in individual opioid use of prescription opioids for nonmedical purposes," researchers found.

A 2018 study suggested that cannabis legalization could actually make the opioid crisis worse, concluding that “cannabis use appears to increase rather than decrease the risk of developing nonmedical prescription opioid use and opioid use disorder.”

Arizona Drug Bust Shows Fentanyl Crisis Growing

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

In one of the largest fentanyl busts in state history, nearly 170,000 counterfeit pills made with illicit fentanyl have been seized in Phoenix, Arizona. A DEA task force and Phoenix police seized the pills during a traffic stop on January 22, arresting two suspects who were under surveillance.

The blue pills were stamped with an “M” and a “30” – distinctive markings for 30mg fake oxycodone tablets known on the street as “Mexican Oxy” or “M30.” The total street value of the drugs was estimated at $3 million.

"These 169,000 pills, it can have a varying amount of fentanyl. They have no quality control, and what makes them that much more deadly is they look like legitimate oxycodone pills. They don't contain an active ingredient. It is just fentanyl with other ingredients," said DEA Spokesperson Erica Curry. 

"We are talking about a very deadly substance in such small quantities it can be lethal to anyone who doesn't have an opioid tolerance built up."

DEA PHOTO

Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid 50 to 100 times more potent than morphine. Counterfeit pills laced with illicit fentanyl have been appearing around the country and are linked to thousands of overdose deaths. In 2019, law enforcement agencies seized over 1.4 million fentanyl pills in Arizona alone.

According to a recent DEA analysis, about one in every four counterfeit pills have a potentially lethal dose of fentanyl.

Street Drug Users Aware of Fentanyl

Who would be foolish or desperate enough to take a street drug that might kill them? Do overdose victims even know the fake pills they’re buying contain fentanyl?

The answer in many cases is yes, according to a new study of street drug users in Vancouver, British Columbia – the first major North American city to see an influx of illicit fentanyl.  

The study drew on data collected from over 300 people recruited at drug treatment sites in 2018. The participants completed a brief survey on their drug use and provided a urine sample that researchers tested for fentanyl and other substances.

About 60 percent of those tested had fentanyl detected in their urine. Of those, nearly two-thirds (64%) knew they had taken fentanyl.

"This research shows the majority of people who use fentanyl know they're doing so," says Dr. Jane Buxton, an epidemiologist and professor at the University of British Columbia, who is corresponding author of the study published in the International Journal of Drug Policy.

"Making people who use drugs aware of the presence of fentanyl in the drug supply isn't enough; we need harm reduction services, substance use treatment, overdose prevention resources, and pharmaceutical alternatives to the toxic drug supply to reduce the devastating impact of fentanyl and its analogues on our communities."

The fentanyl crisis in British Columbia is growing worse by the year.  A similar study in 2015 found only 29% of participants tested positive for fentanyl, with only 27% aware that they'd used it.

When fentanyl first appeared in the illicit drug supply, many users took fentanyl unknowingly because dealers secretly added it to heroin, counterfeit pills and other street drugs. It’s no secret today. According to preliminary data from the BC Coroner, fentanyl or its analogues were found in 85 percent of fatal overdoses in 2019.

Researchers do not fully understand the reasons people knowingly take fentanyl. Some users are aware it is present in the illicit supply of opioids and have no other choice, while others may prefer the experience of taking fentanyl.

"This research lays groundwork that will help us learn more about why fentanyl use is increasing," said lead author Mohammad Karamouzian, a PhD student at UBC's School of Population and Public Health. "These findings will also contribute to more effective messaging campaigns and harm reduction strategies to help reduce preventable deaths and support the health of people who use substances, their families, and their communities."

Another key finding of the study was that people who used fentanyl were more likely to have also recently used heroin or crystal meth.  Those who used cannabis were less likely to use fentanyl.

Would Decriminalization Solve the Overdose Crisis?

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

Vancouver, British Columbia was the first major North American city to be hit by the overdose crisis. In 2016, after a wave of overdose deaths involving illicit fentanyl and even more deadly synthetic opioids like carfentanil, the western Canadian province declared a public health emergency.

Despite efforts to decrease the supply of prescription opioids in BC, over 3,600 more people have overdosed since the emergency was declared, with fentanyl detected in 87% of the deaths last year.

So when BC’s largest healthcare system recommends some radical solutions to the overdose crisis, it’s worth noting. Vancouver Coastal Health (VCH) released a report last month recommending that illegal drugs be decriminalized and that drug users be given access to prescription opioids as an alternative to the black market.

"Legalization and regulation of all psychoactive substances would reduce people's dependence on the toxic illegal supply, criminal drug trafficking and illegal activities that people with addictions must engage in to finance their drug use," said Dr. Patricia Daly, VCH’s chief medical health officer.  

Some Canadian drug policy experts think the idea makes sense.

"The illegal market is an absolute toxic mess right now," Donald MacPherson, executive director of the Canadian Drug Policy Coalition, told the CBC. "It's really in line with consumer protection strategy ... just like we do with every other substance that we ingest, whether it be food or drugs."

Also notable about the VCH report is that – unlike most regulators and politicians in Canada and the U.S. – prescription opioids are not singled out as the root cause of the overdose crisis. Instead, opioid medication is seen as part of the solution.

The report recommends pilot programs to see if prescription fentanyl and other opioid medications made available at supervised consumption sites could help high-risk illicit drug users “transition” to legal opioids.

“Piloting legal access to opioids is different from OAT (opioid agonist therapy) as treatment and would be low-barrier and flexible. Initial pilots would include observation of consumption, followed by pilots allowing distribution of opioids for people to take away for later consumption,” the report recommends.

The idea is controversial, but some doctors are warming up to it. A pilot program recently began at a Vancouver clinic, where hydromorphone tablets are given to about 50 patients who ingest them on site under staff supervision. In Ontario, over 400 healthcare providers and researchers recently signed an open letter asking that high dose injectable hydromorphone be made widely available to illicit drug users.

Substance Abuse and Socioeconomic Problems

The primary cause of the opioid crisis, according to the VCH report, is a “complex interaction” of socioeconomic problems, such as unemployment and homelessness, combined with substance abuse and an increasingly dangerous black market supply.

VCH analyzed the deaths of 424 overdose victims from 2017 and found that less than half (45%) even sought treatment for acute or chronic pain. They were far more likely to be unemployed (72%) and have a substance abuse problem (84%). About four out of ten overdose victims used opioids, alcohol or stimulants daily.

“Most of those who died used multiple substances including opioids, alcohol and stimulants such as cocaine and crystal meth. A significant percentage of those who died of opioid overdoses had primary alcohol use disorder and/or stimulant use disorder,” the report found.

Importantly, most of those who died were no strangers to the healthcare system. The vast majority (77%) had seen a healthcare provider in the year before they overdosed and one out of five (21%) had seen a provider a week before their death. Six out of ten (59%) had received Suboxone or methadone to treat opioid addiction, but the medications were either not effective or they dropped out of treatment.

In addition to decriminalization, the VCH report recommends improving access to addiction treatment, better substance abuse training of healthcare providers, and increased access to the overdose reversal drug naloxone.