Abstract

Background: Stimulant use among individuals with opioid use disorder has recently increased, driven by changes in drug distribution channels. However, our understanding of polysubstance use is often limited by a need to provide targeted treatment to a primary drug of addiction. Yet there is a crucial need to better understand pathways to addiction, and how the use of multiple substances may differ between populations, as well as time periods.Methods: Using a national opioid surveillance system, we analyzed survey data from new entrants to 124 opioid use disorder treatment centers from 2017 to 2020. Age of first use was collected for prescription opioids, illicit opioids, prescription stimulants, crack/cocaine, and methamphetamines. Year of initial use of an opioid or stimulant was calculated and grouped by 5 year blocs, inclusive of initial use starting from 1991 and ending in 2020 (n = 6,048).Results: Lifetime exposure to stimulants was 82.5% among individuals with opioid use disorder. Mean age of initiation increased for all drugs in 2016–2020, in particular prescription opioids (22.3 to 31.8). Stimulants were initiating drugs for a substantial proportion of individuals with opioid use throughout the analyzed time period. Those initiating opioid/stimulant use from 1991 to 1995 had a mean average of 6.8 years between first and second drug exposure, which steadily decreased to 1.5 years between exposures in 2016–2020. Sankey plots depict significantly more drug transitions in those initiating use from 1991 to 2000 (65.1% had at least two drug transitions) compared to 2010–2020 (16.0%). Opioid-stimulant use increased over time among racial/ethnic minorities, sexual minorities, and those with an educational attainment of high school or less.Conclusion: These data highlight not only the substantial prevalence of stimulant use among individuals who develop opioid use disorder, but also the variability through which pathways of use occur. Prevention and intervention efforts need to take into account increasing ages of initial drug exposures, demographic shifts in stimulant-using populations, and more rapid drug transitions between opioid and stimulants. But at a broader level, prevention, harm reduction ideology, and addiction medicine needs to take into account the ubiquity of polysubstance use among individuals with substance use disorders.

Highlights

  • In 2020, the United States reported the greatest number of overdose fatalities on record, over 93,000 [1]

  • The purpose of the present study was to conduct a retrospective analysis of stimulant use over the past 30 years to investigate the prevalence of stimulant use, better understand pathways that link opioid and stimulant use, and ascertain potential shifts in opioid and stimulant use over time

  • Treatment centers from across the country are selected based on their ability to treat opioid use disorder, and their willingness to participate in an ongoing study regarding opioid use disorder and its correlates

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Summary

Introduction

In 2020, the United States reported the greatest number of overdose fatalities on record, over 93,000 [1]. Over the past two decades, the opioid crisis has led to renewed understandings of addiction prevention and treatment, with a number of federal, state and local policies implemented focusing on mitigating supply-side forces such as guidelines and legislation targeting prescription practices [6, 7], prescription drug monitoring programs [8, 9], and abusedeterrent formulations [10, 11]. The use of illicit psychostimulants such as methamphetamine and cocaine have increased, among those using opioids [22,23,24,25,26,27]. Much of this shift is due to changes in market supply forces such as production and distribution. There is a crucial need to better understand pathways to addiction, and how the use of multiple substances may differ between populations, as well as time periods

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