U.S. drug agency to ask Congress to
classify illicit fentanyl like heroin
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[June 04, 2019]
By Sarah N. Lynch
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Illicit chemical
knock-offs of the extremely potent opioid fentanyl would be put
permanently in the same legal class as heroin to boost prosecutions of
traffickers and makers of the drugs, under a proposal to be unveiled on
Tuesday by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.
The new classification is meant to help fight a proliferation of
chemical look-alikes of fentanyl, known as analogues, that are fueling
the U.S. opioid drug epidemic.
It comes more than a year after the start of an emergency ban, due to
expire in February 2020, which helped the DEA to expedite investigations
of new analogues without first having to chemically analyze and classify
each one.
Fentanyl analogues resemble fentanyl and have similar physical effects.
Chemists had been tweaking molecular structures to evade the DEA
scheduling regime.
DEA Acting Chief Operations Officer Greg Cherundolo is set to go before
a Senate committee on Tuesday to propose that Congress make the measure
permanent so that cases against various analogues will not be undercut
when the temporary ban lapses, a senior DEA official told Reuters ahead
of the hearing.
In 2017, more than two-thirds of about 70,200 drug overdose deaths in
America involved an opioid, such as fentanyl, government data shows.
Some of those deaths involved fentanyl prescribed by a doctor, but many
involved illicit versions of the highly addictive synthetic painkiller,
most of which is trafficked from China. Fentanyl is about 100 times more
potent than morphine.
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Plastic bags of fentanyl are displayed on a table at the U.S.
Customs and Border Protection area at the International Mail
Facility at O'Hare International Airport in Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
November 29, 2017. REUTERS/Joshua Lott/File Photo
As prescribed by physicians, fentanyl is classified as a Schedule II
drug. That means it is highly addictive, but has a medicinal
purpose. Placing illicit fentanyl analogues in Schedule 1, along
with heroin, would mean that they are addictive, have no medicinal
purpose and are effectively banned.
The February 2018 emergency order classified all fentanyl analogues
as Schedule 1 drugs. In 2018, the DEA identified 3,591 new compounds
of fentanyl and other synthetic opioids - a 27% increase from 2017.
Whether Congress will make the temporary ban on illicit fentanyl
analogues permanent remains to be seen. Republican Senator Ron
Johnson has offered a draft bill to make the temporary scheduling
permanent.
(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh and Bill
Berkrot)
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