Austin American-Statesman

States widen probe into opioid industry

Companies’ sales, marketing practices are under scrutiny.

- By Geoff Mulvihill

Forty-one attorneys general have joined an effort demanding informatio­n from manufactur­ers as overdose epidemic continues.

Attorneys general from most states are broadening their investigat­ion into the opioid industry as a nationwide overdose crisis continues to claim thousands of lives.

They announced Tuesday that they had served subpoenas requesting informatio­n from five companies that make powerful prescripti­on painkiller­s and demanded informatio­n from three distributo­rs. Forty-one attorneys general are involved in various parts of the civil investigat­ion.

The probe into marketing and sales practices seeks to find out whether the industry’s own actions worsened the epidemic.

If the industry cooperates, the investigat­ion could lead to a national settlement. Connecticu­t Attorney George Jepsen said in an interview that there are early indication­s that drugmakers and distributo­rs will discuss the matter with the states.

“The advantage of the multi-state approach is that it’s not simply about providing a paycheck for damages to states,” Jepsen said. “It provides the opportunit­y to address broader policy concerns and industry practices.”

Companies that received the requests said in statements that they were already taking steps to stem the opioid crisis. The drugmaker Janssen, for instance, said it’s trying to educate prescriber­s about the drugs, and distributo­r Cardinal Health said it supports a variety of efforts to fight the epidemic and would work with attorneys general. Another distributo­r, Amerisourc­e-Bergen, said it has prevented tens of thousands of suspicious opioid orders from shipping.

Allergan spokesman Mark Marmur said his company would cooperate with the investigat­ion but noted that its two branded opioids haven’t been promoted for years and made up less than 1 percent of opioids prescribed in the U.S. last year.

PhRMA, a trade group representi­ng drugmakers, declined to comment on the investigat­ion but said it is trying to deter and prevent drug abuse.

The group and some of its members met Monday with New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, a Republican who is the head of President Donald Trump’s task force on opioids, and pledged to try to develop technologi­es to reduce the risk of addiction and abuse.

Drug overdoses have become a crisis across the country. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that in 2015, they killed more than 52,000 Americans. Most of the deaths involved prescripti­on opioids such as OxyContin or Vicodin or related illicit drugs such as heroin and fentanyl. People with addictions often switch among the drugs.

“Too often, prescripti­on opioids are the on-ramp to addiction for millions of Americans,” New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderm­an said in a statement. He said he sees the investigat­ion as one piece of a broader effort to crack down on opioid abuse that includes measures such as the state’s requiremen­t that doctors check a database of prescripti­ons for controlled substances — a way to keep patients from getting multiple prescripti­ons from multiple doctors.

‘Too often, prescripti­on opioids are the on-ramp to addiction for millions of Americans.’ Eric Schneiderm­an New York attorney general

 ?? JOHN RABY / AP ?? Kentucky Attorney General Andy Beshear (right) speaks about opioid addiction at a news conference Monday in Huntington, West Virginia. At left is West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey.
JOHN RABY / AP Kentucky Attorney General Andy Beshear (right) speaks about opioid addiction at a news conference Monday in Huntington, West Virginia. At left is West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey.

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