Volume 10, Issue 2 p. 340-349
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Investigation of drug products received for analysis in the Swedish STRIDA project on new psychoactive substances

Matilda Bäckberg

Corresponding Author

Matilda Bäckberg

The Swedish Poisons Information Centre, Stockholm, Sweden

Correspondence

Matilda Bäckberg, The Swedish Poisons Information Centre.

Email: [email protected]

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Karl-Henrik Jönsson

Karl-Henrik Jönsson

Medical Products Agency, Uppsala, Sweden

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Olof Beck

Olof Beck

Clinical Pharmacology, Karolinska Univesity Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden

Department of Laboratory Medicine, Karolinska Insitutet, Stockholm, Sweden

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Anders Helander

Anders Helander

Clinical Pharmacology, Karolinska Univesity Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden

Department of Laboratory Medicine, Karolinska Insitutet, Stockholm, Sweden

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First published: 09 June 2017
Citations: 20

Abstract

The web-based open sale of unregulated new psychoactive substances (NPS) has shown a steady increase in recent years. Analysis of drug products sold as NPS is useful to confirm the true chemical contents, for comparison with the substances detected in corresponding body fluids, but also to study drug trends. This work describes the examination of 251 drug products that were randomly submitted for analysis in 173 cases of suspected NPS-related intoxications in the Swedish STRIDA project in 2010–2015. Of the products, 39% were powders/crystals, 32% tablets/capsules, 16% herbal materials, 8% liquids, 1% blotters, and 4% others. The analysis involved tandem mass spectrometry and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. In 88 products (35%), classic psychoactive substances, prescription pharmaceuticals, dietary supplements, or doping agents were found; however, in none of these cases had an NPS-related intoxication been indicated from product markings or patient self-reports. Another 12 products tested negative for psychoactive substances. The remaining 151 products contained 86 different NPS (30% contained ≥2 substances). In 104 drug products, a specific NPS ingredient was indicated based on labelling (69%) or patient self-report; in 92 cases this was also analytically confirmed to be correct. Overall, the NPS products submitted for analysis in the STRIDA project showed a high degree of consistency between suspected and actual content (88%). The results of related urine and/or blood analysis further demonstrated that the patients commonly (89%) tested positive for the indicated NPS, but also revealed that polysubstance intoxication was common (83%), indicating use of additional drug products.