San Diego Union-Tribune

TESTING STREET DRUGS BECOMING STANDARD PRACTICE

Harm reduction groups help users identify ingredient­s

- BY EMILY ALPERT REYES Reyes writes for the Los Angeles Times.

Inside a tent buffeted by the San Diego winds, Tara Stamos-Buesig unpacked her testing kit, hoping the shifting hues of its chemicals could help her save a life.

Billy, a 38-year-old who first started using oxycodone as a teenager, handed her a set of baggies labeled “ketamine,” “heroin,” “crystal meth” and “fentanyl.” Stamos-Buesig hunted for the right bottle of chemical reagents to mix with each sample. She scrutinize­d one baggie after a few drops of reagent had mixed with the sample, tapping a polished fingernail to the corner.

“Did you guys do the ketamine?” she asked Billy and his girlfriend. Not yet, they answered. “I want to see if it has meth in it.”

Stamos-Buesig began hitting the San Diego streets last year with a testing kit, purchased online from the nonprofit DanceSafe, as her own nonprofit was getting off the ground. She has brought its telltale chemicals to tents and hotels, concerts and parties, toting it in a black box from Walmart made for ammunition. Her phone rings late at night as people search online for “drug checking.”

“They’re not trying to die,” said Stamos-Buesig, founder and executive director of the Harm Reduction Coalition of San Diego, which runs a mobile program that provides clean syringes and other supplies to protect the health of people who use drugs. “They’re attempting to keep their use at a manageable level and stay alive.”

As deaths from drug overdoses have hit record highs, claiming an estimated 107,000 lives last year across the United States, many public health advocates, researcher­s and activists are pushing to help people find out what is in their drugs — and use that knowledge to reduce their risk.

Fentanyl, the powerful synthetic drug that has driven up opioid overdoses, can be detected simply with test strips. But as the drug market has grown increasing­ly messy and complex, many want to go further, analyzing the makeup of illegal drugs with more sophistica­ted tools to identify known and new dangers.

Drug deaths are often tied to more than one drug. The year before the pandemic began, nearly half of deadly overdoses across the country involved a combinatio­n of fentanyl, cocaine, heroin or methamphet­amine, a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention analysis found.

Meth is being mixed with opioids with deadly results: Federal data show that as of 2020, more than 60 percent of overdose deaths involving methamphet­amine also involved an opioid, according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse.

“We’ve used forensic chemistry for decades to tell people what’s in drugs after it’s too late,” said Nabarun Dasgupta, senior scientist and innovation fellow at the University of North Carolina’s Gillings School of Global Public Health, where researcher­s are analyzing drug samples submitted by mail. “What we’re trying to do is not wait that long.”

At least 1,138 people died of a drug overdose in San Diego County last year — a 16.7 increase over the previous year. Many of those are blamed on fentanyl.

Stamos-Buesig spent years on the streets herself before she stopped using heroin and meth and went back to school. “There’s nothing different between me and them, except that I’m not there any more,” she said, gesturing to the tents around her as she visited an encampment. “So I come out here. And I carry water into the fire every day.”

When Stamos-Buesig arrived at a the row of tents near a big-box store in San Diego and unpacked her testing kit, David Amrani stepped forward with a scrap of foil. Amrani said that when he first began using fentanyl, he had no idea he was using fentanyl. “I’d wake up dope-sick and not realizing how,” the 35year-old said, “because all I

was doing was crystal.”

Stamos-Buesig unfolded the foil and crumbled a bit of residue into an empty ice cube tray to check if it was meth. “We’ll know by the color change,” she told Amrani, eyeing the squirt of reagent in the tray. As Amrani waited, Stamos-Buesig sprinkled another sample into a container of water, which she checked for fentanyl using a test strip.

The results indicated that it contained both meth and fentanyl, as Amrani had expected this time. StamosBues­ig wondered aloud, based on the particular hue that the reagent had turned, if the drug might also contain heroin, which could take another sample and a squirt of another reagent to suss out.

Fentanyl is popping up in many kinds of drugs, but testing solely for fentanyl can miss other hazards. StamosBues­ig has found that a drug believed to be ketamine — an anesthetic sometimes used recreation­ally — instead contained meth and cocaine. Her kit can identify a range of known drugs including meth, cocaine, oxycodone and heroin and also check for some adulterant­s like aspirin or sugar.

If people know what they are using, she said, they can adjust their plans. Knowing what they are using can also

make it easier to detox with the help of medication.

Sometimes “you still want to do the drug,” said Zachary Markovich, 32, who gets supplies from the San Diego group. But instead of shooting up, “maybe you’ll just smoke it,” which makes it easier to gauge the effect and stop after a smaller dose. “It’s not jumping into the deep end — you’re tiptoeing in.”

Drug mixing is nothing new, but experts warn that its dangers have accelerate­d as the drug supply has become littered with fentanyl and other synthetic compounds.

Fentanyl has unseated heroin in the illicit market because it is cheaper to make, much more powerful, and not tethered to agricultur­al production, said UCLA addiction researcher Joseph Friedman. Because it is so potent, drug suppliers have cut the powder with other substances. And as drug production has shifted toward synthetic drugs, chemists can more readily produce new ones.

“Now that things are in the lab, it’s very easy to make way more compounds, very quickly,” said Bryce Pardo, associate director of the Rand Drug Policy Research Center. New chemicals might be discovered in the plant world every five years or so, Pardo said, but chemists can

tinker and cook up new forms of synthetic drugs “in a weekend” to dodge existing regulation­s.

Some people end up mixing drugs unwittingl­y, as fentanyl and unexpected additives turn up in cocaine, methamphet­amine and counterfei­t pills. Others choose to intentiona­lly mingle drugs for their combined effects.

Dr. Daniel Ciccarone, a University of California San Francisco professor of addiction medicine, said that in the past, many drug users disliked mixing heroin and meth because the stimulant “bowls everything else out of the way,” overwhelmi­ng the effects of the heroin. But with fentanyl, he said, “I think methamphet­amine has met its match.”

“You’re talking about two very powerful drugs, going mano a mano,” Ciccarone said. “And it’s worrisome in terms of what it’s doing physiologi­cally.”

Fentanyl, heroin and other opioids can be deadly because they suppress breathing. Adding in synthetic benzodiaze­pines can ramp up the risk that someone stops breathing because benzodiaze­pines — a category of drugs that includes prescripti­on medication­s like Xanax or Valium used for anxiety — are sedating drugs that increase drowsiness and decrease respiratio­n. Methamphet­amine, in turn, can disrupt the electrical signals in the heart, fatally knocking off its rhythm, said Dr. Nora Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse.

If you combine meth with opioids that hinder breathing, “you can see why this would be a very, very lethal combinatio­n,” Volkow said.

Friedman, the UCLA addiction researcher, said that as drugs have gone synthetic, “there are different kinds of opioids, benzodiaze­pines, stimulants and cannabinoi­ds being synthesize­d and invented and mixed into the drug supply all over the place — and for the most part we don’t know about them.”

One of the lesser-known drugs he has tracked is xylazine, a veterinary tranquiliz­er that has popped up in Philadelph­ia and the East Coast as an additive to lengthen the effects of fentanyl.

Xylazine, which has been linked to gruesome wounds, has not been identified as a major issue in California, but without testing, “we don’t know whether or not that’s circulatin­g here,” said Steffanie Strathdee, a UC San Diego professor in its department of medicine. “We ask people what they’re using in our ongoing study, but if they don’t know what they’re using, then it’s pointless.”

In North Carolina, Dasgupta has been partnering with a community group in Greensboro that analyzes the content of drugs using a technique called FTIR — Fouriertra­nsform infrared spectrosco­py — with a machine roughly “the size of a toaster oven.”

He and other researcher­s built on that work to launch a program that allows drug samples to be mailed in and analyzed from across the country, using a kit that Dasgupta likens to a COVID-19 test, with a swab and a vial of organic solvent that makes the drug sample “unusable” in the eyes of federal authoritie­s.

 ?? NELVIN C. CEPEDA U-T ?? Tara Stamos-Buesig (left) of Harm Reduction Coalition of San Diego tests samples from Billy, who is smoking fentanyl inside his tent in San Diego.
NELVIN C. CEPEDA U-T Tara Stamos-Buesig (left) of Harm Reduction Coalition of San Diego tests samples from Billy, who is smoking fentanyl inside his tent in San Diego.

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