Etonitazene


Etonitazene is an analgesic drug, first reported in 1957, that has been shown to have approximately one thousand to one thousand five hundred times the potency of morphine in animal models, but only sixty times the potency in humans. One of several benzimidazole opioids, etonitazene is structurally related to clonitazene, in which the p-ethoxybenzyl group is replaced by a p-chlorobenzyl group; however, clonitazene itself is only three times as potent as morphine.
Because it is characterized by a strong dependency potential and a tendency to produce profound respiratory depression, it is not used in humans. It is, however, useful in animal models for addiction studies, particularly those requiring the animals to drink or ingest the agent, because it is not as bitter as opiate salts like morphine sulfate.

Illicit production

Illicit production and sale of etonitazene has been limited. Identified on the Moscow illegal drug market in 1998, it was primarily smoked in laced cigarettes. A chemist at Morton Thiokol produced the compound and placed it in a nasal inhaler. The drug was produced in Russia in 1996 and sold as 'Chinese Dwarf'. The drug resulted in an unconfirmed number of deaths due to its uncertain potency. It appears to have a steep dose-response curve that makes it more hazardous than fentanyl.

Analogs

If a carboxide moiety is placed onto the carbon between the benzimidazole and the p-ethoxybenzyl, compounds up to four times more potent were discovered. It is of interest that the extra hydrogen-bond acceptor overlays the nociceptin receptor such as MCOPPB. The most potent drug in this class is -α-benzimidazoyl--α-phenylacetamide, although other studies have demonstrated that the class acts as a semi-rigid fentanyl analogue and rings other than benzene may yield even more potent compounds.
A 2019 publication has shown the possibility the previously assumed binding position of the benzimidazole class acting as a semi-rigid fentanyl analogue may be incorrect. Based on a large scale analysis of known opioid receptor ligands a template was created through manual overlaying and alignment which has identified several mu-specific areas within the receptor. In this analysis it is noted etonitazene now more closely matches another separate mu-specific region sharing very only a small area in common with the fentanyl class.
Drug nameRAnalgesic potency
Etonitazeneethoxy1000
Clonitazenechlorine3
bromine5
fluorine1
Nitazenehydrogen2
methyl10
ethyl30
propyl50
tert-butyl2
Metonitazenemethoxy100
Isotonitazeneisopropoxy500
butoxy200
acetoxy5
methylthio50
ethylthio30

Of these analogues, only etonitazene and clonitazene are explicitly listed as illegal drugs under UN convention and so are illegal throughout the world. The rest would only be illegal in countries such as the US, Australia and New Zealand that have laws equivalent to the Federal Analog Act. In the United States it is a Schedule I narcotic controlled substance with a DEA ACSCN of 9624 and a zero annual manufacturing quota as of 2013.
Etonitazene has proved very important in mapping out the opiate receptor; some experimental compounds in which phenolic groupings have been replaced with nitro groupings have proved more active than the parent compound.

Synthesis

Etonitazene and its related opioid agonist benzimidazoles were discovered in the late 1950s, by a team of Swiss researchers working at the pharmaceutical firm CIBA. One of the first compounds investigated by the Swiss team was 1--2-benzylbenzimidazole, which was found to possess 10% of the analgesic activity of morphine when tested in rodent bioassays. This finding encouraged the group to begin a comprehensive systematic study of 2-benzylbenzimidazoles and to establish the structure-activity relationship of this new family of analgesics. Two general synthetic methods were developed for the preparation of these compounds.
The first method involved the condensation of o-phenylenediamine with phenylacetonitrile to form a 2-benzylbenzimidazole. The benzimidazole is then alkylated with the desired 1-chloro-2-dialkylaminoethane, forming the final product. This particular procedure was most useful for the preparation of benzimidazoles that lacked substituents on the benzene rings. A diagram of this method is displayed below.
The most versatile synthesis developed by the Swiss team first involved alkylation of 2,4-dinitrochlorobenzene with 1-amino-2-diethylaminoethane to form N--2,4-dinitroaniline . The 2-nitro substituent o
n the 2,4-dinitroaniline compound is then selectively reduced to the corresponding primary amine by utilizing ammonium sulfide as the reducing agent. The ammonium sulfide can be formed in situ by the addition of concentrated aqueous ammonium hydroxide followed by saturation of the solution with hydrogen sulfide gas. The intermediate formed by the selective reduction of the 2-nitro substituent, 2--5-nitroaniline, is then reacted with the hydrochloride salt of the imino ethyl ether of 4-ethoxyphenylacetonitrile. The imino ether, 2--acetimidic acid ethyl ester hydrochloride, is prepared by dissolving the 4-substituted benzyl cyanide in a mixture of anhydrous ethanol and chloroform and then saturating this solution with dry hydrogen chloride gas. The reaction between the 2--5-nitroaniline and the HCl salt of the imino ethyl ether results in the formation of etonitazene. This procedure is particularly useful in the preparation of the 4-, 5-, 6-, and 7-nitrobenzimidazoles. Varying the choice of the substituted phenylacetic acid imino ether affords compounds with a diversity of substituents on the benzene ring at the 2- position. A diagram of this particular synthesis as it applies to the preparation of etonitazene is shown below.
A particularly novel, high-yielding synthesis of etonitazene was developed by FI Carroll and MC Coleman in the mid-1970s The authors were tasked with the preparation of large quantities of etonitazene, but found the conventional synthesis to be inadequate. The problem with the conventional synthesis was the lability of the imino ether reactant, 2--acetimidic acid ethyl ester. The imino ether necessitated the use of anhydrous reaction conditions and was inconvenient to prepare in large quantities. This led the authors to experiment with the use of a coupling reagent, EEDQ, in order to promote the condensation of 2--5-nitroaniline with 4-ethoxyphenylacetic acid. Incredibly, the authors discovered that when this condensation was performed in the presence of 2 or more molar equivalents of EEDQ in THF at 50 °C for 192 hours, a near quantitative yield of etonitazene was obtained. In addition to the impressive improvement in yield over the conventional procedure, the work up procedure was greatly simplified since quinoline, carbon dioxide, and ethanol were the only by-products formed. A diagram of this procedure is shown below.
A 2011 publication from a South Korean team outlined a novel, one-pot synthesis for substituted and unsubstituted 2-benzyl-benzimidazoles that can be easily adapted to the preparation of etonitazene. The three component synthesis of the direct etonitazene precursor, 2--5-nitro-1H-benzoimidazole, consists of a 2-Bromo- or 2-Iodo-5-nitro-phenylamine, a 4-substituted benzaldehyde, and sodium azide. The 2-Halo-5-nitro-phenylamine requires a bromo or iodo group for optimal activity. 2-Chloro-phenylamines are completely unreactive. In addition to these three components, the reaction was optimized in the presence of 0.05 molar equivalents of a catalyst, copper chloride, and 5 mol% of ligand, TMEDA. After heating these components at 120 °C for 12 hours in DMSO, the direct etonitazene precursor, 2--5-nitro-1H-benzoimidazole, was formed in an approx 80-90% yield. The secondary amine nitrogen of 2--5-nitro-1H-benzoimidazole was then alkylated with diethylamine to form etonitazene. A diagram of this synthesis is shown below.