Objective: To determine the prevalence of cocaine exposure among preschool children with clinically unsuspected signs and/or symptoms.
Design: Prevalence study.
Setting: Pediatric emergency department in an inner-city hospital.
Participants: 250 children aged 2 weeks to 5 years who underwent urine assays for cocaine prior to discharge from the emergency department.
Interventions: None.
Measurements/main results: Six (2.4%) of the 250 urine assays (95% confidence interval, 0.5% to 4.3%) were positive for benzoylecgonine, the major urinary cocaine metabolite. Four of the positive urine assays were from children younger than 1 year and all children with positive urine assays were younger than 24 months. None of these children presented with a complaint or was identified as having clinical problems currently associated with childhood exposure to cocaine. Possible exposure routes include breastfeeding, intentional administration, accidental ingestion of cocaine or cocaine-contaminated household dust via normal hand-to-mouth activity, and passive inhalation of "crack" vapors.
Conclusion: Among the inner-city children served by this hospital, significant numbers of infants and young children are being exposed to cocaine, and this exposure occurs in a clinically unsuspected population.