Orlando Sentinel

As lawmakers reduce

Rise in heroin deaths unintended consequenc­e

- By Harriet Ryan

the availabili­ty of OxyContin, people in pain have been forced to turn to another drug: heroin.

In an attempt to stem abuse of OxyContin, Purdue Pharma spent a decade and several hundred million dollars developing a version of the painkiller that was more difficult to snort, smoke or inject. Since those “abuse-deterrent” pills debuted six years ago, misuse of OxyContin has fallen and the company has touted them as proof of its efforts to end the opioid epidemic.

But a study released this week found that rather than curtail deaths, the change in OxyContin contribute­d heavily to a surge in heroin overdoses across the country and that as a result there was “no net reduction in overall overdose deaths.”

Experts have long blamed skyrocketi­ng heroin use on painkiller addicts transition­ing to the cheaper, more easily available street opioid. But the study released Monday by scientists at the University of Pennsylvan­ia and RAND Corp. was the first large-scale research to tie the alarming growth in heroin deaths to Purdue’s introducti­on of new pills.

“Our results imply that a substantia­l share of the dramatic increase in heroin deaths since 2010 can be attributed to the reformulat­ion of OxyContin,” the authors wrote.

In response to the study, the company issued a statement noting that government officials have been urging drug companies to develop abuse-deterrent painkiller­s like the reformulat­ed OxyContin. The Food and Drug Administra­tion has approved eight abusedeter­rent opioids, three of them made by Purdue. Abuse-deterrent OxyContin does not prevent the most common way of abusing the drug — simply swallowing whole pills — but it has cut back on abuse of the painkiller by 40 percent, according to some estimates.

“The White House, FDA, and DEA (Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion) consider abuse-deterrent technology to be an important part of a comprehens­ive approach toward combating prescripti­on drug abuse that also includes prevention and treatment,” the statement said.

More than 7 million Americans are estimated to have abused OxyContin since its 1996 debut. The researcher­s from Penn’s Wharton School and RAND analyzed levels of OxyContin abuse on a state-by-state basis in the years leading up to the pill reformulat­ion and then looked at deaths from heroin in a three-year period after the change. They found that heroin deaths more than tripled, from 3,000 in 2010 to 10,500 in 2014. And states where OxyContin abuse rates were the highest “experience­d the largest increases in heroin deaths,” the authors wrote.

Washington University School of Medicine professor Theodore J. Cicero, who separately has studied the role that OxyContin reformulat­ion played in heroin addiction, said he found the Penn-RAND study credible.

Underlying their conclusion­s is the agony of withdrawal from opioids like OxyContin, he said. Addicts suddenly deprived pills they can inject or smoke “feel like they are going to die and the only relief is another opiate,” Cicero said. He said that looking back it is difficult to understand why experts in the field didn’t see that reformulat­ion would lead to increased heroin use.

“It’s hard to imagine that all of us, the FDA included, didn’t pick up on this as a possibilit­y,” he said. Los Angeles Times

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