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Psychopharmacology of Methamphetamine in Relation to the United Kingdom Sentencing Guidance: Comparative Analysis with Amphetamine, Cocaine and Heroin

Amira Guirguis Orcid Logo, Arianna Giorgetti Orcid Logo, Jegak Seo Orcid Logo, John Martin Corkery Orcid Logo, Fabrizio Schifano Orcid Logo

Brain Sciences, Volume: 16, Issue: 6, Start page: 602

Swansea University Author: Amira Guirguis Orcid Logo

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Abstract

Methamphetamine presents a significant scientific and legal challenge for sentencing because, although it is a Class A drug in England and Wales, it is not assigned explicit indicative quantity thresholds within the principal Sentencing Council guideline. This review provides a comparative expert sy...

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Published in: Brain Sciences
ISSN: 2076-3425
Published: MDPI AG 2026
Online Access: Check full text

URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa71948
Abstract: Methamphetamine presents a significant scientific and legal challenge for sentencing because, although it is a Class A drug in England and Wales, it is not assigned explicit indicative quantity thresholds within the principal Sentencing Council guideline. This review provides a comparative expert synthesis of methamphetamine in relation to amphetamine, cocaine and heroin, with particular emphasis on pharmacodynamics, pharmacokinetics, route-specific harms, fatal toxicity indicators and broader patterns of individual-harm profiles. The analysis draws on human laboratory studies, neuroimaging, pharmacokinetic investigations, toxicological literature, drug-related mortality data and policy sources to assess where methamphetamine most appropriately sits within a harm-based sentencing framework. The evidence indicates that methamphetamine is pharmacologically closest to amphetamine, sharing core monoaminergic mechanisms of transporter-mediated neurotransmitter release and vesicular disruption, but differing across several pharmacokinetic and toxicity-related parameters. Compared with amphetamine, methamphetamine shows greater lipid solubility, more efficient central nervous system penetration, longer persistence, and exposure that may, under common high-intensity routes of use, be associated with higher risk of neuropsychiatric, cardiovascular and cerebrovascular harms. Smoked methamphetamine in particular achieves high systemic bioavailability and rapid onset, creating a pattern of exposure more severe than conventional amphetamine preparations and, in some practical respects, closer to high-intensity stimulant models such as crack cocaine. Contemporary evidence further indicates that methamphetamine is associated with higher fatal toxicity than amphetamine, although the magnitude of difference varies by endpoint and no single universal gram-for-gram conversion is supported or recommended. Overall, the literature does not justify treating methamphetamine as simply equivalent to amphetamine, nor does it support conflating it fully with heroin or crack cocaine. The most defensible interpretation is that amphetamine should remain the primary scientific comparator, but with upward adjustment to reflect methamphetamine’s greater persistence and toxicity-related burden, while cocaine may serve as a secondary comparator for proportionality within the Class A sentencing framework. Taken together, the evidence supports consideration of an upward-adjusted amphetamine-based interpretation rather than an unadjusted amphetamine analogue.
Item Description: Opinion
Keywords: methamphetamine; amphetamine; cocaine; toxicity; smoked; sentencing comparator
College: Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
Issue: 6
Start Page: 602