Abstract

Isobutyryl-carfentanyl is the most recently discovered fentanyl analogue with a chemical structure that is similar to that of carfentanyl. Its analogue, carfentanyl, is regarded as one of the most lethal drugs in the world, with a potency of 10,000 times that of morphine. Therefore, isobutyryl-carfentanyl may possess a comparably high potency and its harmful effects cannot be ignored. This study was designed to assess the analgesic effect of isobutyryl-carfentanyl and the potential risks associated with its misuse. In this study, we assessed the acute toxicity of isobutyryl-carfentanyl by up-and-down-procedure, the analgesic efficacy by hot-plate test, the abuse potential by conditioned place preference (CPP), drug self-administration, and drug discrimination tests, and compared it with fentanyl and carfentanyl. The estimated median lethal dose (LD50) of isobutyryl-carfentanyl administered were 175mg/kg (intragastric administration, IG), 15.84mg/kg (intraperitoneal injection, IP), 15.84mg/kg (subcutaneous injection, SC), and 1.6mg/kg (intravenous injection, IV), respectively. The 50% maximal analgesic effect (ED50) of isobutyryl-carfentanyl was determined to be 0.00319mg/kg, with an analgesic potency 14 times that of fentanyl and 0.82 times that of carfentanyl. Isobutyryl-carfentanyl exhibited a significant positional preference at a minimum dose of 0.1mg/kg, while fentanyl exhibited a significant positional preference at a minimum dose of 0.3mg/kg. In the heroin (0.05mg/kg/infusion) self-administration substitution experiment, isobutyryl-carfentanyl showed significant self-administration behaviour at doses of 0.0005-0.001mg/kg/infusion, with the maximum number of infusions observed at a dose of 0.001mg/kg. In the heroin (1mg/kg) drug discrimination experiment, fentanyl (0.005-0.02mg/kg), carfentanyl (0.0005-0.002mg/kg), and isobutyryl-carfentanyl (0.001-0.005mg/kg) were tested in the dose-effect curves. The results showed that all three drugs exhibit dose-dependent increase in the number of drug-associated nose pokes responses and reduction in the rate of nose pokes. The subjective effect potency of isobutyryl-carfentanyl was found to be 4.4 times that of fentanyl and 0.5 times that of carfentanyl. In summary, isobutyryl-carfentanyl has high acute toxicity and analgesic effect, with strong psychological dependence approximately 5 times that of fentanyl and 0.5 times that of carfentanyl, and has extremely high abuse potency.

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