Arab Times

Opioid makers gave $10 mn to advocacy groups amid epidemic

Overdose epidemic claims hundreds of thousands of US lives

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WASHINGTON, Feb 13, (AP): Companies selling some of the most lucrative prescripti­on painkiller­s funneled millions of dollars to advocacy groups that in turn promoted the medication­s’ use, according to a report released Monday by a US senator.

The investigat­ion by Missouri’s Sen. Claire McCaskill sheds light on the opioid industry’s ability to shape public opinion and raises questions about its role in an overdose epidemic that has claimed hundreds of thousands of American lives. Representa­tives of some of the drugmakers named in the report said they did not set conditions on how the money was to be spent or force the groups to advocate for their painkiller­s.

The report from McCaskill, ranking Democrat on the Senate’s homeland security committee, examines advocacy funding by the makers of the top five opioid painkiller­s by worldwide sales in 2015. Financial informatio­n the companies provided to Senate staff shows they spent more than $10 million between 2012 and 2017 to support 14 advocacy groups and affiliated doctors.

The report did not include some of the largest and most politicall­y active manufactur­ers of the drugs.

The findings follow a similar in- vestigatio­n launched in 2012 by a bipartisan pair of senators. That effort eventually was shelved and no findings were ever released.

While the new report provides only a snapshot of company activities, experts said it gives insight into how industry-funded groups fueled demand for drugs such as OxyContin and Vicodin, addictive medication­s that generated billions in sales despite research showing they are largely ineffectiv­e for chronic pain.

“It looks pretty damning when these groups were pushing the message about how wonderful opioids are and they were being heavily funded, in the millions of dollars, by the manufactur­ers of those drugs,” said Lewis Nelson, a Rutgers University doctor and opioid expert.

The findings could bolster hundreds of lawsuits that are aimed at holding opioid drugmakers responsibl­e for helping fuel an epidemic blamed for the deaths of more than 340,000 Americans since 2000.

McCaskill’s staff asked drugmakers to turn over records of payments they made to groups and affiliated physicians, part of a broader investigat­ion by the senator into the opioid crisis. The request was sent last year to five companies: Purdue Pharma; Insys Therapeuti­cs; Janssen Pharmaceut­icals, owned by Johnson & Johnson; Mylan; and Depomed.

Fourteen nonprofit groups, mostly representi­ng pain patients and specialist­s, received nearly $9 million from the drugmakers, according to investigat­ors. Doctors affiliated with those groups received another $1.6 million.

Most of the groups included in the probe took industry-friendly positions.

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