Pubdate: Tue, 20 Apr 2004
Source: New York Times (NY)
Copyright: 2004 The New York Times Company
Contact:  http://www.nytimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298
Author: SANDRA BLAKESLEE

DRUG MAKERS HOPE TO KILL THE KICK IN PAIN RELIEF

Worried that millions of Americans are using prescription opiate 
painkillers to get high rather than to ease severe chronic pain, drug 
makers are working on ways to prevent abuse.

Cooperating closely with government officials and pain specialists, the 
companies are educating doctors, rewriting warning labels and tracking 
pills as they move from pharmacy to patient.

They are also reformulating pills with added ingredients. One combination 
blocks euphoria. Another produces a nasty burning sensation.

"The problem of prescription painkiller abuse is much bigger than people 
realize," said Dr. Clifford Woolf, director of the neural plasticity group 
and professor of anesthesia research at Massachusetts General Hospital in 
Boston and Harvard Medical School.

"No other drug type in the last 20 years had been so abused in such a short 
period of time," he said. "It's an epidemic."

According to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, 
more Americans abuse prescription opiates than cocaine and the abusers far 
outnumber those who misuse tranquilizers, stimulants, hallucinogens, 
heroin, inhalants or sedatives. After marijuana, pain pills are the drug of 
choice for America's teenagers and young adults.

How modern painkillers came to be abused is a story of good intentions gone 
awry. The painkilling action of the opium poppy has been known for 
thousands of years. Misuse of painkillers also has a long history. A 
century ago, mothers routinely rubbed tincture of opium on the gums of 
teething babies to soothe the pain, then took a nip for themselves.

If the medicine was not locked up, other family members often helped 
themselves. Indeed, the problem got so bad that makers of paregoric, the 
most popular liquid opiate, added camphor to their formulations to set off 
a gag reflex.

In recent decades, doctors stopped prescribing opiates because 5 to 10 
percent of people who took them became addicted.

Fear of addiction led to the undertreatment of pain and to untold 
suffering, said Dr. Russ Portenoy, chairman of the department of pain 
medicine and palliative care at Beth Israel Medical Center in New York.

The 50 million Americans with chronic pain needed help. It arrived five or 
six years ago when pharmaceutical companies put very large doses of opiates 
into slow-release formulations. A person who swallows such a pill feels no 
euphoria but is relieved of pain for up to 24 hours.

The new painkillers were heavily marketed to primary care physicians, Dr. 
Portenoy said. It was thought that the drugs would not be abused because 
addicts would not be tempted by sustained release painkillers.

Unfortunately, addicts quickly found that they could grind the pills, 
swallow or snort the powder and get a high dose of opiates delivered 
directly into their bloodstreams. They also liked the fact that the drugs 
were pure and the exact dosage was known.

To counter abuse, drug makers are developing ways to reformulate 
prescription painkillers. Purdue Pharma in Stamford, Conn., which makes 
OxyContin, is thinking of adding a second drug, called an opiate 
antagonist, that neutralizes the effects of the opiate.

The antagonist would be walled off using polymers or some other 
sequestering technique, said Dr. David Haddox, the company's vice president 
of health policy.

A patient who swallowed the drug would get full pain relief, as intended. 
But if someone tampered with the pills, the antagonist would be released.

Then, Dr. Haddox said, one of two things would happen: "If you are a 
recreational drug user, you feel nothing. The effect is canceled out.

"Why abuse something that has the same effects as a glass of water?"

"But if you are physically dependent," he continued, "you get no euphoria 
and it might cause withdrawal. You'd get a double whammy."

A second approach is to mix in a chemical irritant like capsaicin, the main 
ingredient of hot chili peppers, said Dr. Woolf, who has a patent on the idea.

Because the esophagus and stomach do not have many receptors for hot 
peppers, patients could take the pills as prescribed and find relief, he 
said. But the lining of the nose and cheeks are loaded with pepper 
receptors, and anyone who ground up such a pill would get a burning feeling 
in the chest, face, rectum and extremities, as well as paroxysmal coughing.

Reformulations are a promising avenue, but there are risks.

"We want to make sure that a patient who has need of an opioid does not 
suffer side effects from a second drug for which he or she has no need," 
Dr. Haddox said.

"We need to make sure the antagonist doesn't leak," he added.

Approaching the problem from another direction, drug companies and the 
federal authorities are trying to educate doctors and crack down on doctors 
who, for whatever reason, dispense painkillers inappropriately.

The Food and Drug Administration, Dr. Portenoy said, is going after doctors 
who are "duped, dishonest, disabled or dated."

For example, the agency is relabeling prescription painkillers to warn 
primary physicians of the risks involved. Some doctors, he said, are using 
the new drugs for broken fingers rather than devastating chronic pain.

New labels are also being introduced to tell doctors how to recognize 
patients who may be prone to abuse - those with a personal or family 
history of alcohol or prior drug abuse or mental health problems like 
bipolar disease, for example - and if the doctor is suspicious, how to 
monitor those patients with urine tests or other methods.

Some patients go doctor shopping, obtaining prescriptions from a dozen or 
more family physicians. Others tamper with prescriptions. To address this, 
drug manufacturers are providing doctors with tamperproof prescription pads 
that make forgeries difficult. When a prescription is photocopied, the 
copies say "void."

Doctors are also being taught how to write prescriptions more carefully. 
Instead of writing 14 pills, which a patient could alter to 140, the doctor 
writes out the word fourteen. Doctors are also being urged to lock up their 
prescription pads in the same way they would personal checks.

The Drug Enforcement Administration registers all people who handle 
opiates, inspects the documentation of opiate distribution, controls 
imports and exports and oversees the amount of the drugs produced, bought, 
sold or otherwise transferred. Yet, despite these controls, large amounts 
of prescription painkillers are being stolen once the drugs move into the 
hands of pharmacies, doctors and patients. Armed robberies, night break-ins 
and employee thefts are common.

In the face of so much criminal activity, the drug agency is stepping up 
efforts to prosecute dishonest pharmacists and doctors who sell opiates for 
personal profit and to use computer search programs and other means to 
close down so-called pill mills on the Internet. Electronic prescription 
monitoring systems are being enlisted. If the same prescription goes to 15 
pharmacies, the computer system will sound an alarm.

Still, drug addicts will continue to find ways to foil the efforts to foil 
them.

People who came to like paregoric learned to boil the liquid, which removed 
all traces of camphor. The dregs were pure tincture of opium. 
- ---
MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart