Pubdate: Mon, 26 Feb 2007
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Copyright: 2007 Los Angeles Times
Contact:  http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/front/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/248
Author: Mary Beckman
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?232 (Chronic Pain)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment)

A CLOSER LOOK: METHADONE

Painkiller Is Effective But Can Be Deadly

Methadone, found in the body of Anna Nicole Smith's son, Daniel, 
after his death in September, and reportedly prescribed to her, is 
best known as a treatment for heroin addiction.

But it can, and is, being used as a painkiller. The drug has 
properties that make it more effective in dulling pain -- and yet 
more dangerous -- than other opiate drugs, such as morphine and oxycodone.

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Methadone is a synthetic opiate first synthesized by German 
scientists in the 1930s. Used at first as a painkiller, it found its 
niche in treating drug addiction in the 1960s. In the last decade, it 
has had a resurgence as an analgesic.

Like all opiate drugs, methadone acts by mimicking the action of 
natural brain chemicals called endorphins -- which, as any runner can 
tell you, create a feel-good sensation in the brain. The drugs act 
this way because they bind to the same brain receptors as endorphins.

But opiates -- which also include heroin -- act like a really big 
dose of endorphins, causing brain cells to lower the number of 
receptors (called mu receptors) on their surfaces. People then need 
larger amounts of endorphins or opiates to feel normal. Users become 
physically dependent on opiates quickly.

Methadone acts differently, even though it also binds to mu 
receptors. It stays in the body several times longer than the illicit 
drugs, negating withdrawal symptoms, as well as the craving that 
drives people to do whatever it takes to get more heroin. Methadone 
also doesn't elicit the euphoria. And it blocks heroin from binding 
to the mu receptors, so that drug users who try heroin while on 
methadone don't get high. When methadone is handed out in drug 
treatment programs, the patients get only one dose a day, and they 
often have to take it on the spot, reducing opportunities for abuse.

Doctors regained interest in using methadone as a painkiller because 
it's by far the least expensive opiate and appears to be better than 
other opiates at quelling certain types of intractable pain. 
Prescriptions for analgesic methadone have risen at least 250% since 
1998, according to the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health 
Services Administration.

This move has not been without consequences. Deaths due to methadone 
overdoses have been rising dramatically since 2001, SAMHSA has 
reported. This prompted the Food and Drug Administration to send out 
a public health advisory in November alerting physicians to dangerous 
side effects. The rise in deaths is due to methadone's use as a 
painkiller rather than its use in drug treatment, according to SAMHSA.

As a painkiller, methadone is much more potent than the other 
opiates. But that's also where its danger lies. It accumulates in 
body fat, and the doses add up. Unless the patient is carefully 
monitored, he or she runs the risk of an overdose, which could cause 
the brain to shut off the body's ability to breathe. For example, if 
a patient has been taking Vicodin and switches to the same amount of 
methadone, he or she would be risking respiratory depression, says 
Dr. Richard Stephenson, an oncologist who prescribes methadone for 
cancer pain. Patients switching to methadone, he says, have to start 
at low doses -- but, he adds, guidelines for the starting dose have 
been much debated in the analgesia community, partly due to an 
enormous amount of individual variation in the length of time the 
drug stays in the body.

The real benefit of methadone is its ability to relieve pain due to 
nerve damage, called neuropathic pain, which is frequently 
experienced in people with cancer or diabetes or people who have had 
an amputation. Unlike other opiates, methadone binds to certain 
receptors (called NMDA receptors) on pain nerve cells in addition to 
binding to mu receptors. Blocking these receptors while activating mu 
receptors cranks up methadone's ability to stop pain. And when people 
are in chronic pain from cancer or injury, methadone side effects 
such as sleepiness or feeling spacey don't occur. "It's particularly 
effective in complex pain such as cancer," Stephenson says.

Between 1970 and 2002, more than 1,100 deaths were associated with 
methadone's use as a painkiller, according to SAMHSA, with a steep 
rise from 2001 onward. "On balance, methadone has done much more good 
than harm," says Dr. Kenneth Harris, who studies drug addiction at 
the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York City.

Mary Beckman
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MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman