Acute Pharmacological Effects of Oral and Intranasal Mephedrone: An Observational Study in Humans
Esther Papaseit, Eulàlia Olesti, Clara Pérez‐mañá, Marta Torrens, Francina Fonseca, M. Grifell, Mireia Ventura, Rafael de la Torre, Magı́ Farré
Pharmaceuticals January 28, 2021 DOI: 10.3390/ph14020100 via OpenAlex
Summary
Mephedrone, a synthetic cathinone and popular new psychoactive substance, produces euphoria and well-being and increases cardiovascular effects when self-administered orally or intranasally by healthy experienced drug users. In this observational study, ten participants took a single dose orally (100–200 mg, mean 150 mg) or intranasally (50–100 mg, mean 70 mg). Although the oral route sometimes produced greater subjective effects, concentrations of mephedrone in oral fluid and total amounts in urine were considerably higher after intranasal administration. Controlled clinical trials are needed to confirm these results.
Study at a glance
| Characteristics | Observational study Peer reviewed |
|---|---|
| Sample size | 10 |
| Population | Healthy experienced drug users |
| Intervention | Mephedrone |
| Dose | orally 100-200 mg (mean 150 mg) or intranasally 50-100 mg (mean 70 mg) |
| Duration | 4 hours |
| Keywords | Mephedrone Cathinone Nasal administration Pharmacology Euphoriant |
| Citations | 30 |
| Key finding | Both oral and intranasal self-administration of mephedrone enhanced euphoria and well-being and increased cardiovascular effects, but intranasal administration led to considerably higher concentrations of mephedrone in oral fluid and urine. |
Abstract
Mephedrone (4-methylmethcathinone) is a synthetic cathinone with psychostimulant properties which remains one of the most popular new psychoactive substances (NPS). It is frequently used orally and/or intranasally. To date, no studies have evaluated the acute effects and pharmacokinetics after self-administration of mephedrone orally (ingestion) and intranasally (insufflation) in naturalistic conditions. An observational study was conducted to assess and compare the acute pharmacological effects, as well as the oral fluid (saliva) concentrations of mephedrone self-administered orally and intranasally. Ten healthy experienced drug users (4 females and 6 males) self-administered a single dose of mephedrone, orally (n = 5, 100–200 mg; mean 150 mg) or intranasally (n = 5, 50–100 mg, mean 70 mg). Vital signs (blood pressure, heart rate, and cutaneous temperature) were measured at baseline (0), 1, 2, and 4 h after self-administration. Each participant completed subjective effects questionnaires: A set of Visual Analogue Scales (VAS), the 49-item Addiction Research Centre Inventory (ARCI), and Evaluation of the Subjective Effects of Substances with Abuse Potential (VESSPA-SSE) at baseline, 1, 2, and 4 h after self-administration. Oral fluid and urine were collected during 4 h. Both routes of mephedrone self-administration enhanced ratings of euphoria and well-being effects and increased cardiovascular effects in humans. Although it was at times assessed that the oral route produced greater and larger effects than the intranasal one, concentrations of mephedrone in oral fluid and also the total amount of mephedrone and metabolites in urine showed that concentrations of mephedrone are considerably higher when self-administered intranasally in comparison to orally. Controlled clinical trials are needed to confirm our observational results.