Distribution of Traceable Opioid Material* Kits (TOM Kits*) across U.S. and International Laboratories
(formerly known as "Distribution of Traceable Opioid Material* Kits [TOM Kits*] across U.S. Laboratories”)
OMB Control No. 0920-1313
Expiration Date 12/31/2022
Revision
Supporting Statement Part A –
Justification
Project Officer: Rebekah Wharton, PhD
Title: Senior Service Fellow
Division of Laboratory Sciences (DLS), NCEH
Phone: 770-488-7630
Email: [email protected]
Fax: 770-488-7518
Date: 12/02/2022
A.1. Circumstances Making the Collection of Information Necessary 4
A.2. Purpose and Use of the Information Collection 7
A.3. Use of Improved Information Technology and Burden Reduction 9
A.4. Efforts to Identify Duplication and Use of Similar Information 9
A.5. Impact on Small Businesses or Other Small Entities 10
A.6. Consequences of Collecting the Information Less Frequently 10
A.7. Special Circumstances Relating to the Guidelines of 5 CFR 1320.5 10
A.9. Explanation of Any Payment or Gift to Respondents 11
A.10. Protection of the Privacy and Confidentiality of Information Provided by Respondents 11
A.11. Institutional Review Board (IRB) and Justification for Sensitive Questions 12
A.12. Estimates of Annualized Burden Hours and Costs 12
A.13. Estimates of Other Total Annual Cost Burden to Respondents and Record Keepers 14
A.14. Annualized Cost to the Federal Government 14
A.15. Explanation for Program Changes or Adjustments 15
A.16. Plans for Tabulation and Publication and Project Time Schedule 19
A.17. Reason(s) Display of OMB Expiration Date is Inappropriate 19
A.18. Exceptions to Certification for Paperwork Reduction Act Submissions 19
Goal of the study: The
purpose of this information collection request (ICR) is for the CDC
to assure that the Traceable Opioid Material* Kits (TOM Kits*) are
equitably distributed to domestic laboratory sectors (public,
private, and non-profit) and to international partner laboratories. Intended
use of the resulting data: 1)
To gather information on the types of laboratories requesting the
kits, and 2) To determine the types of instrumentation and matrices
for those requesting kits. Methods
to be used to collect:
The CDC
vendor will receive domestic requests for test kits using its
online application form, including questions on laboratory
characteristics to equitably distribute test kits to all laboratory
sectors (academic, public, or private) in the US.
On the domestic front,
the shipment and distribution of test kits is federally sponsored. On
the international front,
the shipment and distribution of test kits is not federally
sponsored. Instead, the CDC vendor will ship test kits in
partnership with the United Nations Office (UN) and under contract
with the International
Narcotics Control Board (INCB)
(hereafter, collectively coined the “UN”) for
distribution. Under the INCB contract, the CDC vendor may also
direct ship test kits upon UN request to select international
laboratories. The CDC vendor will maintain identifiable
international applicant information on its own servers, assign each
lab a unique ID, and then direct the applicants to share their
laboratory characteristics identified only by their unique lab ID
with the CDC using the CDC vendor website. The collection of
anonymized international laboratory information is federally
sponsored. Subpopulation
to be studied: The
domestic subpopulation for this information collection will be
laboratories located in the U.S. They must have a verifiable
business address, must have a current DEA registration, must comply
with respective state and local regulations, and must submit
requests for test kits directly to the vendor.
The
international subpopulation for this information collection will
apply for test kits through a separate vendor application webpage
for international laboratories and will verify test kit eligibility
for requesting laboratories through country-specific drug
enforcement laboratory certifications. How
data will be analyzed: General
purpose statistics such as aggregation of similar responses to
compare quantities with different responses.
Opioid Crisis
The Acting Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) declared opioids a public health emergency on October 26, 2017. This was the first time that a drug class was declared a national public health emergency (Hargan, 2017; GAO, 2018). Since 2013, there have been significant increases in overdose deaths involving synthetic opioids – particularly those involving illicitly manufactured fentanyl. The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) estimates that 76% of all opioid identifications are illicit fentanyls (DEA, 2018 Emerging Threat Report). The drugs in the synthetic opioids other than methadone (SOOTM) category were involved in more than 31,335 overdose deaths in 2018 and accounted for 67 percent of opioid-involved deaths. The drugs in this category include illicit fentanyl and legal opioids available by prescription (DEA, 2020 National Drug Threat Assessment).
To this day, the crisis continues and a public health emergency declaration for opioids remains.1 From 2019 to 2020, the rate of drug overdose deaths increased for all sex, age, and race and Hispanic-origin groups. The age-adjusted rate of drug overdose deaths increased 31 percent from 2019 (21.6 per 100,000 standard population) to 2020 (28.3). The age-adjusted rate of drug overdose deaths for males increased from 29.6 to 39.5 and the rate for females increased from 13.7 to 17.1. Rates of drug overdose deaths increased from 2019 to 2020 for all race and Hispanic-origin groups. The rates were highest for non-Hispanic American Indian and Alaska Natives (AIANs). The greatest percentage increase in rates occurred among non-Hispanic Black and non-Hispanic Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islanders (NHOPIs). (Hedegaard H et al., 2021).
Laboratories are routinely asked to confirm which fentanyl or other opioids are involved in an overdose or encountered by first responders, as it is critical to identify and classify the types of drugs involved in an overdose, how often they are involved, and how that involvement may change over time. By understanding which drugs are present, appropriate prevention and response activities can be implemented.
The illegal manufacture of a variety of fentanyl analogs presents one of the more difficult problems for laboratory analyses of forensic and post-mortem cases. In 2015, members of the scientific community called for more specificity in opioid analyses, and up until 2016, national epidemiological data was sparse on the specific illicit fentanyl analogs entering the market or causing death.
CDC TOM Kits* Development
Laboratory testing does exist for opioids that are available clinically or are widely recognized. However, there has been a rapid expansion in new types of illicit opioids, particularly fentanyl analogues. Health care providers, public health surveillance officials, and law enforcement officers need to know which opioids are in use to treat, monitor, and investigate fatal and non-fatal overdoses. For laboratories to test them, they need samples of the new illicitly manufactured fentanyls of concern. Laboratories will use small amounts of these deadly fentanyl types to develop and maintain the critical ability to identify them.
To fill this need, beginning in 2019, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) developed the Traceable Opioid Material* Kits (TOM Kits*), which provide over 200 opioid reference standards, including over 190 fentanyl analogs.2 CDC maintains the contents of the TOM Kits* based on new needs identified, in part, through the DEA Emerging Threat Reports (DEA, 2016-2021) as well as the Center for Science Research and Education (CFSRE) Novel Psychoactive Substances (NPS) Trend and Scope Reports (2021-2022). These kits were designed to dramatically increase laboratory capability to confirm which opioids are on the streets and causing deaths. The kits are free to laboratories in the public, private, clinical, law enforcement, research, and public health domains (Attachment 3).
To equitably distribute the TOM Kits*, in 2019, the CDC conducted an emergency information collection, titled “Distribution of Traceable Opioid Material* Kits (TOM Kits*) across U.S. Laboratories,” under the Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary’s Public Health Emergency Paperwork Reduction Act (PHE PRA) Waiver mechanism for the period from 03/20/2019 to 05/10/2019 (Attachment 4a). From 05/10/2019, CDC continued distributing kits using a generic information collection (GenIC) under “Generic Clearance for the Collection of Qualitative Feedback on Agency Service Delivery” (OMB Control No. 0923-0047; expiration date 01/31/2022) (Attachment 4b). CDC next requested and received Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) clearance in 2020 under “Distribution of Traceable Opioid Material* Kits (TOM Kits*) across U.S. Laboratories” (OMB Control No. 0920-1313, expiration date 12/31/2022) (Attachment 4c).
Emergent Drug Panel Kits
To continue this collection, the CDC is requesting a three-year Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) clearance for a revision information collection request (ICR). As part of this revision, CDC will be expanding its TOM Kits* program to include its new Emergent Drug Panel (EDP) Kits. For the EDP Kits, the compounds will be identified by doing a search of recent lists put out by the DEA and the CFSRE. These lists provide data on all classes of drugs that are recently identified in the field and provide recommendations on which drugs should be included in testing. These lists are updated several times a year and keep up with the changing drug landscape in the United States. For the current round, EDP Kits will include synthetic cannabinoids, stimulants, hallucinogens, and benzodiazepines as well as opioids.
Distribution to Domestic and International Laboratories
CDC will continue to distribute TOM Kits*, including the new EDP Kits, through a single vendor instead of the previous two. The CDC vendor will distribute these kits to domestic laboratories, as previously approved. Additionally, the CDC vendor will now ship TOM Kits*, currently excluding the EDP kits, to international laboratories in partnership with the United Nations (UN) and under a separate non-CDC contract with the International Narcotics Control Board (INCB) (hereafter, collectively coined the “UN”). The CDC vendor may direct ship these kits to select international laboratories upon UN request.
CDC is updating Attachment 5a (formerly Attachment 7) to display the vendor’s online application and questions for US laboratories. CDC is proposing several modifications to the questions to accommodate the next round of vendor requirements. See Section A.15 for a detailed description of the form modifications.
As part of the revision ICR and in parallel to the domestic application information, the CDC vendor will also receive test kit applications from international laboratories which are directed to the CDC vendor website by the UN, assign each lab a unique ID, and then direct the applicants to complete questions on their laboratory characteristics using the CDC vendor website, and identified only by their unique lab ID. See the new Attachment 5b.
Proposed Changes to Estimated Burden Hours and Responses
The following changes to burden hours and to the number of responses per year are as follows. We estimate a total time burden of 80 hours, which is a decrease of 40 hours over the previously approved 120 hours. We estimate a total number of 900 annual responses which is a decrease of 300 over the previously approved 1,200 responses.
We anticipate that 600 domestic laboratories will request test kits per year (a decrease of 600 applicants over the previously approved 1,200). The annual time burden for domestic laboratories will be 60 hours.
We will add 20 additional annual burden hours with the expansion to international distribution of test kits, assuming that 300 international partner labs will request test kits through the UN and will complete their laboratory information for the CDC.
Details of the requested revisions can be found in Section A.15.
Authority
CDC is authorized to carry out this program under the Public Health Service Act, Section 301, “Research and Investigation,” (42 U.S.C. 241) (Attachment 1). The 60-day Federal Register Notice was published on 09/16/2022 (Attachment 2) and is further discussed in Section A.8.
The purpose of this information collection is for an application for benefits and general-purpose statistics.
Since 2019, CDC began supplying TOM Kits* through two vendors including the: (1) Opioid Certified Reference Material Kit (Opioid CRM Kit); and (2) Fentanyl Analog Screening Kit (FAS Kit). CDC received a total of 230 requests for and distributed 519 Opioid CRM Kits. CDC also received a total of 1,242 requests for and distributed 2,488 FAS Kits. Therefore, the number of requests for TOM Kits* since 2019 is 1,472, or approximately 490 requests per year (1,472 divided by 3 = 491).
Over the next three years, CDC will distribute an expanded array of TOM kits* through a single vendor (Attachment 3).3 The kits are all manufactured by Cayman Chemical 4
FAS Kits (original and four emergent panels: FAS Version 1, FAS Version 2 and 3, and FAS Version 4)
Opioids
See a list of compounds in each FAS Kit panel at https://www.cdc.gov/nceh/dls/erb_fas_kits.html.
Includes 200 micrograms each of 200+ fentanyl analog analytical reference materials
Provides largest collection of available fentanyl analog reference materials
Improves immunoassay and mass spectrometry screening methods
Includes structural variability for fentanyl analog
Distributed internationally and domestically by Cayman Chemical
EDP Kits
Opioids
Synthetic Cannabinoids
Stimulants and Hallucinogens
Benzodiazepines
Includes 200 micrograms of each analytical reference material
Addresses the most prevalent drugs currently found in drug seizures and overdose deaths reported by the DEA and CRSRE
Improves immunoassay and mass spectrometry screening methods
Distributed domestically by Cayman Chemical
For domestic requests, respondent laboratories requesting the kits can be from any sector (academic, public, or private), must be located in the U.S., must have a verifiable business address, must have a current Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) registration, must comply with respective state and local regulations, and must submit requests directly to the vendor. As the number of laboratories requesting test kits may exceed the supply, this information collection will be used to prioritize which laboratories will receive the limited quantities of kits. The brief six-minute web-based survey will allow the CDC to (1) determine what service the recipient laboratory performs and the volume of samples the laboratory processes and (2) equitably distribute TOM Kits* based on the analysis techniques and matrices used by the recipient laboratory (Attachment 5a).
In addition, CDC will expand its distribution of FAS Kits to international labs in partnership with the UN and under a non-CDC contract with the INCB (Attachment 3).
Cayman Chemical may direct ship test kits to international laboratories at UN request.
The CDC vendor will receive test kit applications from international laboratories on its own servers, assign each lab a unique ID, and then direct the applicants to share their information with CDC by completing questions on their laboratory characteristics identified only by their unique lab ID using the CDC vendor website. See the new Attachment 5b.
The information collection will serve to gather information on the types of laboratories requesting the kits and to determine the types of instrumentation and matrices that those requesting kits will use them for. If the demand for the kits is greater than the supply of kits, questions about the laboratory function will aid in assuring that labs that serve a variety of different functions will have access to kits. Collecting information about the volume of samples that the lab typically processes assures that the labs with the biggest volume do not get all the kits, thereby allowing smaller labs access to the kits. Questions pertaining to the matrix and method of analysis is information that can be used to tailor future kits to the needs of the labs that are using the kits.
If no information about lab function is collected, there may be a disproportionate distribution of kits to labs that serve similar or identical functions, thereby leaving a paucity of kits for laboratories that perform other functions. Additionally, no information to assist in improving the program, or how to optimize the way the sample material is provided would be possible.
Information from domestic laboratories will be collected through the TOM Kits* manufacturer’s website (Attachments 3, 5a). The information collection is 100% electronic. There is no special software that will be used, and the survey uses common internet interfaces to complete, thereby minimizing any training time and cost to fill out the form. Upon completion, a submission button is used to submit electronically and instantaneously. By adopting a common internet interface, and one that can be accessed with any major web browser, errors are minimized, costs and burden time are reduced, and ease of submission is maximized.
Applicant information from international laboratories will be collected by the CDC vendor on its own secure servers. The CDC vendor website will direct applicants to complete the supplemental test kit questions for international laboratories located on the CDC vendor website (Attachments 3, 5b).
It is possible that a laboratory may submit more than one request for TOM Kits*. The CDC website 5, “Traceable Opioid Material* Kits to Improve Laboratory Detection of Synthetic Opioids in the U.S.” states that although laboratories may request multiple kits, supplies are limited and requests will be filled based on product availability. If requesting multiple kits over time, the attributes of a laboratory and the analysis method of the TOM Kits* materials may change. Therefore, future requests will require filling the survey out again to ensure the most up-to-date information is being used to prioritize kit distribution.
There is no information elsewhere about the types of labs, quantity of samples analyzed by the labs, or matrix types used by labs performing opioid analysis, so it is critical that the program ask these questions for prioritizing kit distribution.
Because this information collection involves laboratories as respondents, a large proportion will affect small businesses or other small entities. Nevertheless, the Test Kits survey (Attachment 5a) is designed to collect the absolute minimum amount of information needed (six-minute survey) to distribute materials, and the recipient laboratories will benefit by receiving free TOM Kits*.
Based on our respondent estimates (Section A.12), we assume that 67 percent of the US respondents will be small businesses or other small entities (e.g., 200 state/local/tribal government laboratories + 200 private/not-for-profit institutions ÷ 600 = 67%). The remaining 33 percent (n=200) of the US respondents are estimated to come from the federal government.
The US respondents will be able to follow the links from the CDC TOM Kits* Factsheet (Attachment 3) and CDC’s website 2 to the vendor website 4 to fill out the domestic online “Test Kit Application and Questions for US Laboratories” (Attachment 5a). Cayman will provide the international applicants with a link to the international online “Test Kit Questions for International Laboratories” (Attachment 5b). This information collection is voluntary, but the respondents must complete their applications to be considered to receive the requested TOM Kits*.
This request fully complies with the regulation 5 CFR 1320.5.
A 60-day Federal Register Notice was published in the Federal Register on 09/16/2022, Vol. 87, No. 179, pp. 56957-8 (Attachment 2). CDC/ATSDR received one non-substantive comment requiring no agency response (see https://www.regulations.gov/comment/CDC-2022-0109-0002).
The data collection surveys were designed collaboratively by CDC personnel. Consultation will continue throughout the implementation process. There were no external consultations.
Name |
Title |
Affiliation |
Phone |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Rebekah Wharton, PhD |
Senior Service Fellow |
Emergency Response Branch |
(770) 488-7630 |
|
Rudolph, Johnson, PhD |
Supervisory Research Chemist |
Emergency Response Branch |
(770) 488-3543 |
|
Mike Mojica, PhD |
Associate Service Fellow |
Emergency Response Branch |
(404) 498-1404 |
|
Samantha Isenberg, PhD |
Associate Service Fellow |
Emergency Response Branch |
(770) 488-3435 |
|
Melissa Carter, PhD, MBA |
(Former) Senior Service Fellow |
n/a |
n/a |
n/a |
Respondents will not receive payments for providing information. Selected recipient laboratories will receive the TOM Kits* at no cost as described in Section A.2.
On 12/02/2022, the CDC Chief Privacy Officer has reviewed this submission and determined that the Privacy Act does not apply (Attachment 6).
The following Information in Identifiable Form (IIF) Categories apply to the information collection from domestic laboratories (Attachment 5a): however, records will not be retrieved by these identifiers.
❑ Name (Business Contact)
❑ Email Address (Business Contact)
❑ Phone Numbers (Business Contact)
The records generated from this collection will be for research support and will be disposed of after their administrative usefulness has been met or no longer than 5 years after project completion, depending on the program need.
The NCEH/ATSDR Human Subjects Advisor has determined that this information collection is not research involving human subjects and that IRB approval is not required (Attachment 7).
CDC collects information about laboratories and does not collect personally sensitive information. Laboratories may view information collections pertaining to Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) Numbers, organizational policies, performance data, or other practices as sensitive; however, the information that CDC is requesting is not anticipated to result in liability or competitive disadvantage if a breach should occur.
The following domestic burden hours and number of annualized responses were estimated from CDC’s experience since 2019. CDC is now distributing its domestic product line through a single vendor. We anticipate that the annual number of domestic respondents will be 600 applicants (or 200 per sector). With the average time per response at 6 minutes, this will yield an estimated annual burden of 20 hours per sector and a total of 60 hours for all domestic laboratories to apply for test kits.
The following international burden hours and number of annualized responses were estimated as follows. The international respondents will apply for test kits on UN servers and will be directed to respond to additional test kit questions on the CDC vendor website. Given that there are 300 international partner laboratories, we assume that it will take 4 minutes per response for a time burden of 20 hours per year.
The annualized time burden requested is 80 hours.
Estimated Annualized Burden Hours
Type of Respondents |
Form Name |
Number of Respondents |
Number of Responses per Respondent |
Average Burden per Response (in hours) |
Total Burden (in hours) |
US Federal Laboratories |
Test Kit Application and Questions for US Laboratories (online) |
200 |
1 |
6/60 |
20 |
State, Local, and Tribal Government Laboratories |
Test Kit Application and Questions for US Laboratories (online) |
200 |
1 |
6/60 |
20 |
Private or Not-for-Profit US Institutions |
Test Kit Application and Questions for US Laboratories (online) |
200 |
1 |
6/60 |
20 |
International Laboratories |
Test Kit Questions for International Laboratories |
300 |
1 |
4/60 |
20 |
Total |
Estimates of the annualized cost to domestic respondents were based on the Department of Labor “May 2021 National Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates, United States” mean hourly wages. (https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_nat.htm#00-0000).
NCEH used the following occupation codes and hourly wage estimates to represent each domestic respondent type in the burden table. Absent information on international wages, we assume the same hourly wage will apply to the international laboratory respondent staff.
Mean Hourly Wages for Domestic Respondent Types
Respondent Type |
Occupation Code |
Occupation Title |
Mean Hourly Wage |
Laboratorians and laboratory directors |
19-0000 |
Life, Physical, and Social Science Occupations |
$38.81 |
Estimated Annualized Burden Costs
Type of Respondent |
Form Name |
Number of Respondents |
Number of Responses per Respondent |
Average Burden per Response (in hours) |
Total Burden Hours |
Hourly Wage Rate |
Total Respondent Costs |
US Federal Laboratories |
Test Kit Application and Questions for US Laboratories (online) |
200 |
1 |
6/60 |
20 |
$38.81 |
$776.20 |
State, Local, and Tribal Government Laboratories |
Test Kit Application and Questions for US Laboratories (online) |
200 |
1 |
6/60 |
20 |
$38.81 |
$776.20 |
Private or Not-for-Profit US Institutions |
Test Kit Application and Questions for US Laboratories (online) |
200 |
1 |
6/60 |
20 |
$38.81 |
$776.20 |
International Laboratories |
Test Kit Questions for International Laboratories |
300 |
1 |
4/60 |
20 |
$38.81 |
$776.20 |
Total |
$3,104.80 |
The information system is designed to use existing hardware within vendor and applicant sites. No capital or maintenance costs are expected. Additionally, there are no start-up, hardware, or software costs.
Average annualized cost is $5,000,000 or less. This estimate was based on the following table:
Staff |
GS Level |
Salary (2022) |
% FTE |
$ Cost |
Project Officer, Senior Service Fellow |
13 |
$106,234 |
10% |
$10,623.40 |
|
|
|
|
|
Salary Sub-total |
|
|
|
$10,623.40 |
Other Annualized Costs |
$ Cost |
|||
Travel |
$20,000.00 |
|||
Contracts |
|
|||
Procurement of Traceable Opioid Material* Kit Materials and Recipient Laboratory Support, 75D301-19-D-06777 |
$4,700,000.00 |
|||
Total |
$4,737,736.60 |
As part of this revision, CDC is changing the title of this ICR from “Distribution of Traceable Opioid Material* Kits (TOM Kits*) across U.S. Laboratories” to “Distribution of Traceable Opioid Material* Kits (TOM Kits*) across U.S. and International Laboratories.” The title change is necessary due to the expansion of test kit distribution to international customers. Additional revisions include the following:
CDC is adding their new line of TOM Kits*, Emergent Drug Panel (EDP) Kits, for distribution. The EDP compounds are identified by doing a search of recent lists put out by the DEA and the Center for Forensic Science Research and Education (CFSRE). These lists provide data on all classes of drugs that were recently identified in the field and provide recommendations on which drugs should be included in testing. These classes of drugs may be found mixed with opioids and contribute to the opioid epidemic. These lists are updated several times a year and keep up with the changing drug landscape in the United States.
CDC will continue to distribute TOM Kits*, including the new EDP Kits, through a single vendor instead of two.
To adjust for this program expansion, for domestic laboratories, CDC is modifying Attachment 5a (Test Kit Application and Questions for US Laboratories [screenshots/Word], formerly Attachment 7).
Attachment 5a. Online application fields for US laboratories (Modifications shown in RED text.) |
||
Approved 2020 |
Proposed 2022 |
Requested Change in 2022 |
First Name |
First Name |
No change to text |
Last Name |
Last Name |
|
Institution |
Institution |
|
Lab Name (optional) |
Lab Name (optional) |
|
Street Address Line 1 |
Street Address Line 1 |
|
Street Address Line 2 |
Street Address Line 2 |
|
City |
City |
|
State |
State |
|
Zip Code |
Zip Code |
|
County |
[DELETED] |
Redundant with address |
No change to text |
||
Verify Email |
Verify Email |
|
Telephone |
Telephone |
|
Quantity Requested |
[DELETED] |
Move question after asking for test kit type(s) requested. |
Does your laboratory have a current DEA registration to handle scheduled substances?
|
Does your laboratory have a current DEA registration to handle scheduled substances?
|
No change to text |
|
Fentanyl Analog Screening (FAS) Quantity [___] FAS Version 1 Quantity [___] FAS Version 2 and 3 Quantity [___] FAS Version 4 Quantity [___] Emergent Drug Panel (EDP) Quantity [___]
|
|
|
|
|
Modifications to TOM Kit* Questions due to expanding to several types of Opioid Kits and addition of new Emergent Drug Panel (EDP) types |
||
TOM Kit* Questions (formerly Attachment 7) |
Test Kit Questions (renamed; now Attachment 5a) |
Requested Change in 2022 |
Approved 2020 |
Proposed 2022 |
|
|
2. Which of the following best describes your laboratory? (Select only one)
|
Renumber as 2. Correct typo from “of” to “or” |
|
|
Renumber as 3 |
|
q Opioids q Synthetic Cannabinoids q Stimulants and Hallucinogens q Benzodiazepines
|
Add new question 4; TOM Kits* includes a variety of opioids, of which FAS Kits are a subtype. The other three categories are part of the EDP Kits. |
|
q <100 q 100-500 q 501-1000 q >1000
|
Renumber as 5; specify new Emergent Drug Panel (EDP) types; correct typo from “101” to “100” |
|
|
Renumber as 6; no change to text |
|
|
Renumber as 7; modify “matrix type” to “sample matrices;” add two additional types of sample matrices |
|
[DELETED] |
Eliminate question |
*TRACEABLE OPIOID MATERIAL, TOM KITS, and the TOM KITS logo are marks of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. |
CDC is expanding the distribution of these test kits to international laboratories through a partnership with the UN. The CDC vendor will bulk ship test kits to UN for international distribution, or the vendor may direct ship these kits to select international laboratories upon UN request.
Based on this change, we are adding Attachment 5b (Test Kit Questions for International Laboratories [screenshots/Word]) and a new row in the burden table (Section A12). These reports will contain similar laboratory information as on the domestic application (Attachment 5a). On behalf of the UN, the vendor, but not CDC, will collect application PII on international laboratories. International laboratories may receive the same test kits as domestic laboratories, except for the EDP kits.
Burden Estimations
The following changes to burden hours and the number of annualized responses are as follows.
We estimate a total time burden of 80 hours, which is a decrease of 40 hours over the previously approved 120 hours. We estimate a total number of 900 annual responses which is a decrease of 300 over the previously approved 1,200 responses.
Changes to the burden for domestic laboratories are as follows, based on CDC’s experience since 2019:
The annual number of responses are 600, with 200 responses from each of the three sectors (academic, public, or private). This is a decrease of 600 applicants over the previously approved 1,200.
The annual time burden will be 60 hours, which is a decrease of 60 hours over the previously approved 120 hours.
With the expansion to international distribution of test kits, the following changes have been made.
A new row in the time and cost burden tables have been added (Section A12).
We assume that 300 international partner laboratories will request test kits.
Each international laboratory will take 4 minutes to complete this information on the CDC vendor website (20 hours for 300 laboratories per year).
Information collected will be used to prioritize requests received by the CDC. If this prioritization is discussed within a manuscript describing kit distribution, then it may be published with other data.
Table A.16.1
Project Time Schedule |
|
Activity |
Time Schedule |
Collection continues with PRA clearance |
Beginning January 2023 |
Analyses |
As needed |
Publication |
TBD if applicable |
The display of the OMB expiration date is appropriate.
There are no exceptions to the certification. These activities comply with the requirements in 5 CFR 1320.9.
U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA). 2016-2021. DEA Emerging Threat Reports. (CESAR) Center for Substance Abuse Research. University of Maryland. (Accessed 07/14/2022 at https://cesar.umd.edu/publications/dea-emerging-threat-reports#:~:text=DEA%20Emerging%20Threat%20Reports%20The%20Drug%20Enforcement%20Administration%27s,analyzed%20by%20the%20Drug%20Enforcement%20Administration%E2%80%99s%20laboratory%20system.)
U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA). 2021. 2020 National Drug Threat Assessment (NDTA). (Accessed 07/14/2022 at https://www.dea.gov/sites/default/files/2021-02/DIR-008-21%202020%20National%20Drug%20Threat%20Assessment_WEB.pdf)
U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO). 2018. Opioid Crisis: Status of Public Health Emergency Authorities (GAO-18-685R). 2018. (Accessed 07/14/2022 at https://www.gao.gov/assets/gao-18-685r.pdf)
Hargan ED. 2017. HHS Acting Secretary Declares Public Health Emergency to Address National Opioid Crisis. (Accessed 07/14/2022 at https://public3.pagefreezer.com/browse/HHS.gov/31-12-2020T08:51/https://www.hhs.gov/about/news/2017/10/26/hhs-acting-secretary-declares-public-health-emergency-address-national-opioid-crisis.html and at https://public3.pagefreezer.com/browse/HHS.gov/31-12-2020T08:51/https://www.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/opioid%20PHE%20Declaration-no-sig.pdf).
Hedegaard H, Miniño AM, Spencer MR, Warner M. Drug overdose deaths in the United States, 1999–2020. NCHS Data Brief, no 428. Hyattsville, MD: National Center for Health Statistics. 2021. DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.15620/cdc:112340. (Accessed 07/14/2022 at https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/products/databriefs/db428.htm)
Traceable Opioid Material® Kits to Improve Laboratory Detection of Synthetic Opioids in the U.S. https://www.cdc.gov/nceh/dls/erb_opioid_kits.html
https://www.cdc.gov/nceh/dls/pdf/Opiod_Factsheet-508.pdf
https://www.caymanchem.com/forensics/faskit/?q=*%3A*
1 Public Health Emergency Declarations: https://www.phe.gov/emergency/news/healthactions/phe/Pages/default.aspx.
2 See CDC TOM Kits website at https://www.cdc.gov/nceh/dls/erb_opioid_kits.html.
4 Cayman Chemical - https://www.caymanchem.com/
5 Available at https://www.cdc.gov/nceh/dls/erb_opioid_kits.html.
File Type | application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document |
Author | Richardson, Tony (CDC/OD/OADS) |
File Modified | 0000-00-00 |
File Created | 2023-07-31 |