Examination of Naloxone Dosing Patterns for Opioid Overdose by Emergency Medical Services in Kentucky during Increased Fentanyl Use from 2018-2021

Original research
by
Rock, Peter et al

Release Date

2023

Geography

USA

Language of Resource

English

Full Text Available

Yes

Open Access / OK to Reproduce

Yes

Peer Reviewed

Yes

Objective

Fatal overdoses involving fentanyl/fentanyl analogs (F/FA) have increased in the US, raising questions about naloxone doses for F/FA overdose reversal. Emergency medical services (EMS) data provide an opportunity to examine naloxone administration changes as fentanyl increases in the illicit opioid supply.

Findings/Key points

As F/FA-involved overdose risk increased, we observed a modest increase in INTD administered in SOO EMS encounters – just slightly higher than the 4 mg standard dose. The lack of significant relationship between F/FA and naloxone dose suggests that naloxone utilization in SOO with EMS involvement remains effective for overdose reversal, and that EMS naloxone dosing patterns have not changed substantially.

Design/methods

Administered naloxone intranasal-equivalent total dose (INTD) in milligrams (mg) was calculated for Kentucky EMS suspected opioid overdose (SOO) encounters (n=33,846), 2018-2021, and patterns of administration were examined.

Keywords

Overdose