Iran Daily

Opioid makers paid millions to advocacy groups

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Five opioid manufactur­ers including Oxycontin maker Purdue Pharma LP have paid more than $10 million to advocacy groups and doctors tied to them, many of whom amplified industry messages supporting the use of the painkiller­s, a US Senate report said.

According to Reuters, the report, released by Democratic Senator Claire Mccaskill, said groups who received the donations aligned themselves with industry goals and may have played a role in an epidemic that in 2016 led to 42,000 opioid overdose deaths.

The report released by Mccaskill, the US Senate Homeland Security and Government­al Affairs Committee’s ranking Democrat, said the groups issued guidance promoting opioids for chronic pain and lobbied against laws to curb their use.

“These financial relationsh­ips were insidious, lacked transparen­cy, and are one of many factors that have resulted in arguably the most deadly drug epidemic in American history,” Mccaskill, of Missouri, said in a statement.

Purdue Pharma, which announced it would stop promoting opioids to doctors, was the biggest donor, giving $4.15 million to 12 groups from 2012 to 2017, the report said.

The groups include patient advocacy organizati­ons and medical profession­al societies.

One recipient was the Academy of Integrativ­e Pain Management (AIPM), which partnered with another group to lobby state legislatur­es on opioid-related issues and fight efforts to restrict opioid prescribin­g, the report said.

Purdue said in a statement that it supported organizati­ons interested in helping patients receive appropriat­e care. AIPM Executive Director Bob Twillman said that financial contributi­ons had not influenced its positions.

The report said Insys Therapeuti­cs Inc., which markets the fentanyl-based cancer pain drug Subsys, gave $3.15 million to US Pain Foundation and others, ranking No. 2 in donations to the 14 groups examined.

Federal prosecutor­s have accused several former Insys executives and employees, including billionair­e Insys founder John Kapoor, of engaging in a scheme to pay kickbacks to doctors to prescribe Subsys. Kapoor has pleaded not guilty.

US Pain Foundation said the $2.5 million Insys donated in 2017 was for a fund to help cancer patients pay for pain drugs, and that the money did not influence its values. Insys said it strives to follow regulation­s.

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