Chattanooga Times Free Press

Medicare takes crack at cutting down on use of opioids

Doctors fear pain patients will suffer

- BY JAN HOFFMAN NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

Medicare officials thought they had finally figured out how to do their part to fix the troubling problem of opioids being overprescr­ibed to the old and disabled: In 2016, a staggering one in three of 43.6 million beneficiar­ies of the federal health insurance program had been prescribed the painkiller­s.

Medicare, they decided, would now refuse to pay for long-term, highdose prescripti­ons; a rule to that effect is expected to be approved on April 2. Some medical experts have praised the regulation as a check on addiction.

But the proposal also has drawn a broad and clamorous blowback from many people who would be directly affected by it, including patients with chronic pain, primary care doctors and experts in pain management and addiction medicine.

Critics say the rule would inject the government into the doctor-patient relationsh­ip and could throw patients who lost access to the drugs into withdrawal or even provoke them to buy dangerous street drugs. Although the number of opioid prescripti­ons has been declining since 2011, they noted, the rate of overdoses attributed to the painkiller­s and, increasing­ly, illegal fentanyl and heroin, has escalated.

“The decision to taper opioids should be based on whether the benefits for pain and function outweigh the harm for that patient,” said Dr. Joanna L. Starrels, an opioid researcher and associate professor at Albert Einstein College of Medicine. “That takes a lot of clinical judgment. It’s individual­ized and nuanced. We can’t codify it with an arbitrary threshold.”

Underlying the debate is a fundamenta­l dilemma: how to curb access to the addictive drugs while ensuring that patients who need them can continue treatment.

The rule means Medicare would deny coverage for more than seven days of prescripti­ons equivalent to 90 milligrams or more of morphine daily, except for patients with cancer or in hospice. (Morphine equivalent is a standard way of measuring opioid potency.)

According to Demetrios Kouzoukas, the principal deputy administra­tor for Medicare, it aims to further reduce the risk of participan­ts “becoming addicted to or overdosing on opioids while still maintainin­g their access to important treatment options.”

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services estimates 1.6 million patients have prescripti­ons at or above those levels. The rule, if approved as expected at the end of a required comment and review period, would take effect on Jan. 1, 2019.

Dr. Stefan G. Kertesz, who teaches addiction medicine at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, submitted a letter in opposition, signed by 220 professors in academic medicine, experts in addiction treatment and pain management, and patient advocacy groups. His patients include formerly homeless veterans, many of whom have a constellat­ion of physical and mental health challenges, and struggle with opioid dependence. For them, he said, tapering opioids does not equate with health improvemen­t; on the contrary, he said, some patients contemplat­e suicide at the prospect of suddenly being plunged into withdrawal.

“A lot of the opioid dose escalation between 2006 and 2011 was terribly ill advised,” Kertesz said. “But every week I’m trying to mitigate the trauma that results when patients are taken off opioids by clinicians who feel scared. There are superb doctors who taper as part of a consensual process that involves setting up a true care plan. But this isn’t it.”

Some two dozen states and a host of private insurers already have put limits on opioids, and Medicare has been under pressure to do something, too. Last July, a report by the inspector general at the Department of Health and Human Services raised concerns about “extreme use and questionab­le prescribin­g” of opioids to Medicare recipients. In November, a report from the Government Accountabi­lity Office took Medicare to task, urging greater oversight of opioid prescripti­ons.

If the rule takes effect, Mark Zobrosky’s experience could be a harbinger for many patients. Zobrosky, 63, who lives in the North Carolina Piedmont, takes opioids for back pain, which persists despite five surgeries and innumerabl­e alternativ­e treatments. He has an implanted spinal cord stimulator that sandpapers the edge off agony, and has broken four molars from grinding because of pain, he said. He receives Medicare as a result of his disability, including a private plan that pays for his drugs.

He submits to random urine tests and brings his opioids to his doctor to be counted every month. To prepare for mandatory reductions, his doctor has tapered him down to a daily dose equivalent of about 200 milligrams of morphine. (Zobrosky has a large frame; doctors say opioid tolerance depends on many factors — one person’s 30 milligrams is another person’s 90.)

In February, Zobrosky’s pharmacist told him his insurance would no longer cover oxymorphon­e. His out-of-pocket cost for a month’s supply jumped to $1,000 from $225, medical records show. “I can’t afford this for very long and I’m nervous,” he said.

A Medicare official who would speak only on background said the limit for monthly high doses was intended not only to catch doctors who overprescr­ibe, but also to monitor patients who, wittingly or not, accumulate opioid prescripti­ons from several doctors. When the dose is flagged, the pharmacist or patient alerts the doctor. But it falls to pharmacist­s to be the bad-news messengers. James DeMicco, a pharmacist in Hackensack, New Jersey, who specialize­s in pain medication­s, said that negotiatin­g opioid insurance rejections for patients was already “beyond frustratin­g.” He spends hours shuttling between doctors and insurers. “My heart goes out to patients because they feel stigmatize­d,” he said.

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