Skip to main content
NIHPA Author Manuscripts logoLink to NIHPA Author Manuscripts
. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2024 Jan 18.
Published in final edited form as: Int J Drug Policy. 2013 Jun 29;24(4):279–280. doi: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2013.06.004

‘Krokodil’ and what a long strange trip it’s been

Lyuba Azbel a,b, Sergey Dvoryak c, Frederick L Altice a,d,*
PMCID: PMC10794905  NIHMSID: NIHMS1954249  PMID: 23820241

Grund et al. should be applauded for their exhaustive review of krokodil, a previously under-described and excessively harmful home-produced opioid that is new in Ukraine, Russia, and Georgia (United States Department of State, 2010). The adverse medical consequences of well-known as well as new illicit homemade drugs continue to remain part of our evolving lexicon, including “shirka”, “vint”, “crank”, “bath salts”, “lemon drop”, and now “krokodil”, to name a few. To our knowledge, the first complication associated with illicit drug injection appeared in 1876 in the Lancet that described a case of “tetanus” after injection of “morphia” (Anonymous, 1876). Since this brief report of a woman who had practiced injection to alleviate the vomiting of pregnancy, medical literature has abounded with reports on the adverse sequelae of illicit drug injection. Thus, injection of new “non-prescribed” substances should not be considered an unusual or aberrant behavior, but rather, a significant social phenomenon with major public health, and societal consequences.

The relatively new introduction of krokodil reported in this issue reminds us “what a long, strange trip it’s been” since the earliest reports of medical complications from illicit drug injection. Medical consequences among people who inject drugs (PWIDs) were first reviewed in the 1960s (Cherubin, 1967) and again a quarter century later (Cherubin & Sapira, 1993). What appears to have emerged since that time are explosive epidemics of blood-borne viruses like HIV and viral hepatitis among PWIDs as well as newly introduced illicit street drugs, oftentimes manufactured inexpensively at home, each with its own set of social and medical costs (Altice, Kamarulzaman, Soriano, Schechter, & Friedland, 2010). Emerging from the Soviet tradition of homemade substances, the production of new substances like krokodil has been necessitated by PWIDs to ensure continuously accessible and affordable drugs. Due to its frequent administration and the variability in chemical formulations, the health effects of krokodil have been particularly dramatic. Exaggerated injection site reactions, including skin and soft-tissue infections (SSTIs) and necrosis are common (Demidova & Mokhachev, 2011; Gahr et al., 2012).

To address these medical complications, it is necessary to focus our scarce resources toward drug treatment and prevention. Our internationally failed efforts in the War on Drug Users remind us that evidence-based drug treatment services are either insufficient or completely unavailable throughout much of the world. Considering now decades of unsuccessful attempts to control drug use through interruption in drug transportation routes, levying harsh criminal penalties for drug users, and demonizing people with serious underlying medical and psychiatric disorders, it is high time to redirect our efforts. In countries like Ukraine and Russia where extrajudicial policing practices are a barrier to effective drug treatment (Mimiaga et al., 2010; Sarang, Rhodes, Sheon, & Page, 2010), it is no surprise that PWIDs resort to homemade production of drugs like krokodil in spite of its debilitating effects on health. In Ukraine, <2% of PWIDs receive opioid substitution therapy (OST) while OST remains completely unavailable in nearby Russia where one of the fastest growing HIV/AIDS epidemics remains unbridled (Bojko, Dvoryak, & Altice, 2013; Wolfe, Carrieri, & Shepard, 2010). Of those who do survive injection of krokodil in these countries, many will experience the consequences of HIV/AIDS.

How is it possible that public health authorities are not outraged with the current insufficient treatment and prevention options available in the emerging economies of Ukraine and Russia? For example, it is untenable that clinicians would discharge a hospitalized patient admitted for a minor cerebrovascular accident without an aftercare plan that minimally includes control of their hypertension and physical rehabilitation. PWIDs, however, are frequently discharged from the hospital after a course of antibiotics for endocarditis or SSTIs without direct provision of or linkage to OST or other types of evidence-based addiction treatment. This unequal treatment of PWIDs by healthcare providers and policy-makers reminds us that harsh, sanctions-based attitudes prevail (Wolfe, 2007). This remains particularly problematic when drug addiction is a chronic, relapsing disease that is often treatable, but requires long-term strategies to facilitate treatment retention through improved access and removal of structural barriers to care (Izenberg & Altice, 2010). The emergence of krokodil use is a case in point: the urgent need for treatment becomes even more apparent in the context of the homemade production of a substance associated with such dramatic harms.

It is true that not all PWIDs choose rehabilitation, even when readily available. For these individuals, harm reduction strategies have proven remarkably effective at reducing the negative consequences of drug injection. This alternative to punitive approaches to controlling drug use includes a number of effective strategies, including needle and syringe exchange programs (NSEPs), bleach distribution, drug treatment such as OST on demand, alternatives to incarceration and court diversion programs for minor drug-related offenses, safer injection rooms, heroin maintenance, or, as suggested by Grund et al., the introduction of safer homemade opioid injectable recipes (Klous, Van den Brink, Van Ree, & Beijnen, 2005; Mathers et al., 2010). Such programs, however, must have sufficient coverage, and scaled to need.

If reducing the medical and social harms from illicit drug injection are not compelling in themselves, even in today’s flailing global economy, expansion of OST within Ukraine is the single most cost-effective strategy for controlling a volatile HIV epidemic. Expanding antiretroviral therapy (ART) to PWIDs would also increase efficacy, but at a modestly increased price (Alistar, Owens, & Brandeau, 2011). This treatment is particularly relevant in a homemade drug culture like that of the former Soviet Union which engenders a high HIV risk environment. Adequate ART expansion, however, remains elusive with ART coverage being <10% for PWIDs in Ukraine and Russia (Wolfe et al., 2010).

History teaches us that necessity is the mother of invention and there will be many “new” drug fads that emerge over time. Until there is universal access to harm reduction treatment, however, it is crucial for clinicians and those who interact with PWIDs to recognize these agents and bring them to public attention in order to stimulate a debate on effective ways to obviate the adverse social and medical costs that will otherwise result.

Funding

The authors would like to thank the National Institutes on Drug Abuse for funding for research (R01 DA029910 and R01 DA033679) and Career Development (K24 DA017072).

References

  1. Alistar SS, Owens DK, & Brandeau ML (2011). Effectiveness and cost effectiveness of expanding harm reduction and antiretroviral therapy in a mixed HIV epidemic: A modeling analysis for Ukraine. PLoS Medicine, 8, e1000423. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  2. Altice FL, Kamarulzaman A, Soriano VV, Schechter M, & Friedland GH (2010). Treatment of medical, psychiatric and substance-use comorbidities in people infected with HIV who use drugs. Lancet, 376, 59–79. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  3. Anonymous. (1876). Tetanus after hypodermic injection of morphia. Lancet, 2, 873. [Google Scholar]
  4. Bojko MJ, Dvoriak S, & Altice FL (2013). At the crossroads: HIV prevention and treatment for people who inject drugs in Ukraine. Addiction, 10.1111/add.12243 (Epub ahead of print) [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  5. Cherubin CE (1967). The medical sequelae of narcotic addiction. Annals of Internal Medicine, 67, 23–33. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  6. Cherubin CE, & Sapira JD (1993). The medical complications of drug addiction and the medical assessment of the intravenous drug user: 25 years later. Annals of Internal Medicine, 119, 1017–1028. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  7. Demidova OV, & Mokhachev SO (2011). Brief report about 68 cases of desomorphine misuse. Narcologiya, 10, 96–98. [Google Scholar]
  8. Gahr M, Freudenmann RW, Hiemke C, Gunst IM, Connemann BJ, & Schonfeldt-Lecuona C (2012). Desomorphine goes crocodile. Journal of Addictive Diseases, 31, 407–412. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  9. Izenberg JM, & Altice FL (2010). Next steps for Ukraine abolition of HIV registries, implementation of routine human immunodeficiency virus testing and expansion of services. Addiction, 105, 569–570. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  10. Klous MG, Van den Brink W, Van Ree JM, & Beijnen JH (2005). Development of pharmaceutical heroin preparations for medical coprescription to opioid dependent patients. Drug and Alcohol Dependence, 80, 283–295. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  11. Mathers BM, Degenhardt L, Ali H, Wiessing L, Hickman M, Mattick RP, et al. (2010). HIV prevention, treatment, and care services for people who inject drugs: A systematic review of global, regional, and national coverage. Lancet, 375, 1014–1028. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  12. Mimiaga MJ, Safren SA, Dvoryak S, Reisner SL, Needle R, & Woody G (2010). We fear the police, and the police fear us: Structural and individual barriers and facilitators to HIV medication adherence among injection drug users in Kiev, Ukraine. AIDS Care, 22, 1305–1313. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  13. Sarang A, Rhodes T, Sheon N, & Page K (2010). Policing drug users in Russia: Risk, fear and structural violence. Substance Use and Misuse, 45, 813–864. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  14. United States Department of State. (2010). International Narcotics Control Strategy Report, Money Laundering and Financial Crimes. Vol. II. [Google Scholar]
  15. Wolfe D (2007). Paradoxes in antiretroviral treatment for injecting drug users: Access, adherence and structural barriers in Asia and the former Soviet Union. International Journal of Drug Policy, 18, 246–254. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  16. Wolfe D, Carrieri MP, & Shepard D (2010). Treatment and care for injecting drug users with HIV infection: A review of barriers and ways forward. Lancet, 376, 355–366. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]

RESOURCES