Super-strength synthetic opioid likely to have killed many more than first thought
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Researchers at King's College London suggest that deaths linked to nitazenes, potent synthetic opioids, are likely underestimated by up to a third in England.
This underreporting is attributed to nitazenes degrading in post-mortem blood samples, making them undetectable in standard toxicology tests.
A study published in Clinical Toxicology found that only 14 per cent of nitazene remained in samples under typical handling conditions, leading to missed detections.
Despite the National Crime Agency reporting 333 nitazene-linked fatalities in 2024, experts believe the true number is significantly higher.
The underestimation of nitazene-related deaths means public health responses are based on incomplete data, potentially hindering effective interventions and leading to preventable fatalities.
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