Santa Fe New Mexican

FDA to expand medication-assisted therapy for opioids

- By Sheila Kaplan

In an effort to encourage new treatments for opioid addiction, the Food and Drug Administra­tion plans to begin permitting pharmaceut­ical companies to sell medication­s that help temper cravings, even if they don’t fully stop addiction.

The change is part of a wider effort to expand access to medication-assisted treatment, or MAT. The agency will issue draft guidelines in the next few weeks. A senior agency official provided details of the proposal to The New York Times.

The new approach was signaled Saturday by the health and human services secretary, Alex Azar, in remarks to the National Governors Associatio­n. Azar said the agency intended “to correct a misconcept­ion that patients must achieve total abstinence in order for MAT to be considered effective.”

While President Donald Trump’s administra­tion has generally supported medication-assisted treatment, Azar’s predecesso­r, Tom Price, was not completely on board with it. Price caused an uproar among treatment experts when he dismissed some medication­s that reduce cravings through synthetic opioids last spring as substituti­ng one opioid for another. He subsequent­ly walked back those comments, saying officials should be open to a broad range of treatment options.

Azar, who took office late last month, said he would work to reduce the stigma associated with addiction and addiction therapy, and would not treat it as a moral failing.

The opioid epidemic is considered the most unrelentin­g drug crisis in U.S. history. In 2016, roughly 64,000 people were killed by opioid-related overdoses, including from prescripti­on painkiller­s and heroin.

Noting federal data showing that only one-third of specialty substance abuse treatment programs offer medication-assisted treatment, Azar said, “We want to raise that number — in fact, it will be nigh impossible to turn the tide on this epidemic without doing so.”

Azar’s comments echo those of the FDA chief, Dr. Scott Gottlieb, who has made battling opioid abuse a priority for his agency. Gottlieb has moved to reduce opioid prescripti­ons by doctors and dentists and to promote more medication-assisted treatment, defined as drugs used to stabilize brain chemistry, reduce or block the euphoric effects of opioids, relieve physiologi­cal cravings, and normalize body functions.

The FDA has approved three drugs for opioid treatment — buprenorph­ine (often known by the brand name Suboxone), methadone and naltrexone (known by the brand name Vivitrol) — and says they are safe and effective combined with counseling and other support. But the agency said it would soon publish two guidances — recommenda­tions for drugmakers — on the issue.

One encourages the developmen­t of new, longer-acting formulatio­ns of existing drugs for opioid treatment. The other, which was described in detail to The Times by an official who spoke anonymousl­y because the policies are being finalized and have not yet been made public, said new drugs would be eligible for approval that don’t end addiction but help with aspects of it, such as cravings, or overdoses, with the goal remaining complete abstinence.

 ?? NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Stacey Brandmeyer, a recovering addict, in 2014 holds her Suboxone prescripti­on, which helps with withdrawal symptoms, at her apartment in Bennington, Vt. The Trump administra­tion wants to make such medication­s more widely available.
NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO Stacey Brandmeyer, a recovering addict, in 2014 holds her Suboxone prescripti­on, which helps with withdrawal symptoms, at her apartment in Bennington, Vt. The Trump administra­tion wants to make such medication­s more widely available.

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