Pubdate: Thu, 12 Dec 2002
Source: Baltimore Sun (MD)
Copyright: 2002 The Baltimore Sun, a Times Mirror Newspaper.
Contact:  http://www.sunspot.net/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/37

TABLET SOON AVAILABLE FOR QUITTING HEROIN Anti-addiction treatment offered 
by prescription beginning next month

Doctors will be able to start prescribing buprenorphine, a new treatment 
for heroin addiction, in the privacy of their offices when the medication 
reaches pharmacies next month, federal officials said yesterday.

Unveiling a national campaign to educate doctors and patients, officials 
said the treatment should enable thousands of addicts who do not want to go 
to methadone clinics - or who cannot get into the crowded programs - to set 
out on the road to recovery.

"This major advancement in substance abuse treatment will provide more 
options to people in need of drug treatment," said Charles G. Curie, 
administrator of the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services 
Administration.

"It permits doctors to treat addiction to heroin or other opioids, 
including prescription painkillers, just like any other medical condition, 
such as diabetes or hypertension," Curie said.

Congress passed a law two years ago that enabled doctors to prescribe 
buprenorphine tablets in their offices after taking an eight-hour training 
course. But it took another two years for the U.S. Food and Drug 
Administration to approve its use, doing so in October.

Odis Rivers, a recovering heroin addict who lives in Baltimore, stepped 
forward at a news briefing yesterday to say that the medication enabled him 
to quit using heroin after 32 years. His habit had ruined two marriages and 
estranged him from his children.

He said he entered "detox" programs numerous times but kept reverting to 
heroin when the craving became unbearable. He was afraid to try methadone 
because he had heard too many stories, which he now regards as untrue, that 
the drug was harmful.

In 1998, Rivers heard from another addict who had enrolled in a clinical 
trial in Detroit that buprenophine had helped her kick heroin. That year, 
Rivers enrolled, too, and said he has been off heroin ever since.

"I was able to start using my head and think and make good decisions," he 
said. "I started feeling a lot better and more relaxed. This is something 
that can help addicts become responsible persons."

He added, "There is no way you can just stop all by yourself."

With his doctor's guidance, Rivers began tapering his dosage two years ago 
and soon was able to stop taking it altogether. He says he hasn't relapsed 
into heroin use, though he attends a 12-step program to stay in recovery.

Dr. Frank Vocci, director of treatment and research at the National 
Institute on Drug Abuse, said many addicts might have to stay on 
buprenorphine indefinitely. The goal, he said, isn't necessarily to stop 
treatment - it's to stay off heroin.

"The ultimate point is to get people to manage [addiction] and understand 
it as a chronic relapsing disorder," he said.

Availability of buprenorphine comes as Maryland is experiencing a steady 
increase in overdose deaths resulting from the use of heroin, alcohol and 
other drugs. Yesterday, the University of Maryland, College Park reported 
that overdoses killed 559 people last year, a 16 percent increase over 1997.

More than four-fifths of the fatalities were caused by overdoses of heroin, 
either singly or in combination with other drugs.

Originally tested as a pain medication, buprenorphine was studied for more 
than 15 years as a potential treatment for addiction at the National 
Institute on Drug Abuse in Baltimore and at the Johns Hopkins Bayview 
Medical Center.

The tablet works by satisfying an addict's craving for opioids - a family 
of drugs that includes heroin, morphine and codeine - without producing a 
"high." In some cases, it has the added benefit of making a patient sick 
with withdrawal-like symptoms if the person decides to use narcotics again.

Doctors have the option of prescribing a buprenorphine-only tablet or a 
tablet that combines buprenorphine and naloxone, a formulation that is 
designed to prevent abuse. If someone dissolved the latter form of the 
medication and injected it, an addict would experience intense withdrawal 
symptoms, according to researchers.

Buprenorphine isn't necessarily more effective than methadone in helping 
people kick a heroin habit but might be more palatable to addicts who fear 
the loss of privacy that might come with attending a methadone clinic on a 
daily basis, researchers say. Addiction specialists hope it will take the 
pressure off methadone clinics, which generally are full and have long 
waiting lists.

Also, in rural areas, some people have to drive hundreds of miles to reach 
the nearest methadone clinic.

About 2,000 doctors have taken the necessary training to prescribe 
buprenorphine, not nearly enough to serve the millions of people who need 
treatment. In Maryland, about 35 doctors have been trained.

The federal government plans to expand the number of qualified physicians 
by holding training sessions in 14 cities, including Baltimore, in the 
coming year.
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