Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Has OxyContin reduced abuse of opioids?

- By Matthew Perrone

Is a new version of the painkiller OxyContin helping fight the national opioid epidemic?

WASHINGTON >> Dr. Raeford Brown was uniquely positioned to help the U.S. government answer a critical question: Is a new version of the painkiller OxyContin helping fight the national opioid epidemic?

An expert in pain treatment at the University of Kentucky, Brown led a panel of outside experts advising the Food and Drug Administra­tion on opioids that have been reformulat­ed to deter snorting and injecting.

There’s just one problem: Neither the company that makes OxyContin nor the FDA has allowed the experts to see data on whether it reduces abuse.

“We asked for that data probably 40 or 50 times in last four or five years and were denied every time,” said Brown, whose term as an FDA adviser ended in March.

Nearly a decade ago, the FDA approved reformulat­ed OxyContin and told the company, Purdue Pharma, that it would be evaluated on whether the new version decreased cases of addiction, overdose and death. The data submitted by Purdue to answer that question remains secret.

“It’s in the public interest that we all know what these drugs are doing and yet none of us can see it, which is really terrifying when you think about it,” Brown told The Associated Press.

In 2015, Brown and his colleagues were supposed to review follow-up data on OxyContin at a meeting in Washington, but the FDA canceled it only days before. Purdue had pulled its applicatio­n to update OxyContin’s label with new informatio­n on abuse, saying it wanted more time to analyze the data. Such meetings are typically planned

months in advance and are almost never canceled.

A Purdue spokesman said the Stamford, Connecticu­t-based company has been working to complete four updated study requiremen­ts assigned by the FDA in 2016. The company said it has submitted three of the FDA-mandated studies and expects to submit the final one by October.

“Once all of the studies are completed and FDA has had the opportunit­y to review the results, we will evaluate options to disseminat­e this important data to the scientific community,” said Bob Josephson, in a statement.

But the FDA’s top staffer for opioids said at a public meeting last year that the agency expected the informatio­n to become available “years ago.”

“They have it, but it’s hard for us to force them to submit it,” said Sharon Hertz, FDA’s division director for pain medication­s.

The unreleased OxyContin data highlights the FDA’s precarious role as both a public health agency and close confidante of industry. While the agency can order a drugmaker to research important questions, the informatio­n itself still belongs to the company and is deemed “confidenti­al commercial informatio­n.”

An FDA spokeswoma­n

said in an email that it would be “premature” to comment on Purdue’s results before they have been fully submitted and reviewed. The agency noted that the company’s final OxyContin study has been delayed. FDA staffers expect the studies “will help us understand the real-world impact of OxyContin’s reformulat­ion on abuse,” said Lyndsay Meyer.

OVERDOSE DEATHS

If OxyContin has reduced overdose deaths, federal statistics don’t show it.

OxyContin remains the best-selling opioid brand in the country, but it accounts for less than 2 percent of U.S. opioid prescripti­ons, potentiall­y limiting its impact on national trends. (Most opioids prescribed are low-priced generic pills.)

Since the new formulatio­n was approved in 2010, fatal overdoses involving prescripti­on opioids including OxyContin, Percocet and generic pills have risen more than 30 percent to about 14,500 in 2017, the most recent year for which complete data is available. Preliminar­y figures released last week suggest drug-related deaths likely fell last year for the first time in decades.

Some researcher­s have suggested reformulat­ed OxyContin, combined with tighter prescribin­g and other measures, accelerate­d the nationwide shift toward heroin and fentanyl.

Those drugs were involved in more than 43,000 overdose deaths in 2017, nearly three times the number as prescripti­on opioids.

The FDA has now approved seven opioids, including OxyContin, with labeling that they are “expected” to discourage abuse.

Those pills are intended to be difficult to crush, break or dissolve, but they can still be misused when simply swallowed. And the drugs carry the same addiction risks.

“The real problem with opioids from the public health perspectiv­e is addiction,” said Dr. Lewis Nelson, a Rutgers University emergency medical specialist who also serves as an FDA adviser. “These pills in the reformulat­ed version don’t do anything to reduce the likelihood or magnitude of addiction.”

Purdue has published preliminar­y informatio­n on reformulat­ed OxyContin in peer-reviewed journals, but the studies are clouded by potential biases and limitation­s. Many are written by Purdue scientists or researcher­s whose work is funded by the company. In most cases, the data comes from a network of specialize­d sources, including poison control centers, law enforcemen­t records and drug rehabilita­tion clinics.

Those sources show a positive picture for OxyContin’s performanc­e, with key indicators like emergency

calls, law enforcemen­t reports and rates of patients seeking prescripti­ons from multiple prescriber­s — known as doctor shopping — dropping.

But even the study authors acknowledg­e that those measures don’t necessaril­y reflect what’s happening across the country. Only a small segment of people misusing opioids ever enter rehabilita­tion, for instance.

When FDA researcher­s decided to independen­tly examine OxyContin abuse in a study using a much larger dataset — a federal government annual survey — they found a different picture. Among people with a history of misusing prescripti­on opioids, rates of OxyContin abuse were similar or higher three years after the drug was reformulat­ed.

“If you were going to see an impact, this is the population where you should see it. And we didn’t see anything,” said Dr. Christophe­r Jones, who co-authored the 2017 paper and now works at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The paper’s findings square with survey results suggesting less than 5 percent of long-term abusers gave up OxyContin after it was reformulat­ed.

Garrett Hade of Los Angeles said that when he was addicted to opioids it would take him only a few minutes in his kitchen to prepare OxyContin for injecting.

 ?? JESSICA HILL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? In this file photo, Christine Gagnon, of Southingto­n, Conn., holds a sign during a protest with others who have lost loved ones to OxyContin and opioid overdoses, outside the Purdue Pharma headquarte­rs in Stamford, Conn.
JESSICA HILL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE In this file photo, Christine Gagnon, of Southingto­n, Conn., holds a sign during a protest with others who have lost loved ones to OxyContin and opioid overdoses, outside the Purdue Pharma headquarte­rs in Stamford, Conn.

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