Legal Medicine
Volume 12, Issue 3 , Pages 157-159, May 2010

A fatality involving an unusual route of fentanyl delivery: Chewing and aspirating the transdermal patch

  • Henry J. Carson

      Affiliations

    • Office of the Jackson County Medical Examiner, Kansas City, MO, USA
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author at: Office of the Jackson County Medical Examiner, 660 E 24th Street, Kansas City, MO 64108, USA. Tel.: +1 816 881 6600 (O); fax: +1 816 881 6598.
  • ,
  • Laura D. Knight

      Affiliations

    • Onondaga County Department of Health, Medical Examiner’s Office, Syracuse, NY, USA
    • State University of New York School of Medicine, Syracuse, NY, USA
  • ,
  • Mary H. Dudley

      Affiliations

    • Office of the Jackson County Medical Examiner, Kansas City, MO, USA
    • University of Missouri Kansas City School of Medicine, Kansas City, MO, USA
  • ,
  • Uttam Garg

      Affiliations

    • Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Children’s Mercy Hospitals and Clinics, University of Missouri Kansas City School of Medicine, Kansas City, MO, USA

Received 13 December 2009; received in revised form 21 January 2010; accepted 5 March 2010. published online 02 April 2010.

Abstract 

We recently encountered a subject who died from an uncommon misuse of a fentanyl transdermal patch, chewing, followed by complications of aspiration of the patch. We report this case to alert medical examiners to the troubling trend of increased fentanyl patch abuse and its expanding range of misuses and associated morbidities. The decedent was a 28-year-old white male with a past medical history of prescription drug abuse who was pronounced dead in the emergency department shortly after arrival. An autopsy was completed and a tough but stretchy beige foreign body was identified lodged in a mainstem bronchus. Toxicological analysis of femoral blood showed methamphetamine, fentanyl and norfentanyl concentrations of 1456, 8.6 and 1.4ng/mL, respectively. Individuals who abuse prescription medications often modify the route of administration of the drug from the intended method. As this case demonstrates, this choice can be fatal. The novel findings include a chewed patch, aspiration of a drug patch, and combination with an illicit drug at potentially lethal blood levels for both methamphetamine and fentanyl in a novice user.

Keywords: Fentanyl, Transdermal patch, Drug abuse, Methamphetamine

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PII: S1344-6223(10)00035-0

doi:10.1016/j.legalmed.2010.03.001

Legal Medicine
Volume 12, Issue 3 , Pages 157-159, May 2010