The Mail on Sunday

Why is the NHS still dishing out 10,000 prescripti­ons a year for the dangerous, banned painkiller CO-PROXAMOL?

- By Rosie Taylor

DOCTORS are handing out 10,000 NHS prescripti­ons a year for an unlicensed painkiller that is linked to suicides and accidental overdoses. The drug, co-proxamol, is considered both dangerous and ineffectiv­e and can trigger breathing difficulti­es, heart-rhythm problems and heart attacks. Yet scores of patients are dependent

on the tablets, claiming nothing else works with the long-term pain conditions they suffer – and despite warnings from health chiefs, some GPs and pain consultant­s feel they should keep providing it.

In 2020 alone, the NHS spent £2.5 million on the drug. Users say they have also obtained co-proxamol via private prescripti­ons, paying as much as £1,000 a month.

Its licence was withdrawn in 2005 by drugs watchdog the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Authority (MHRA). However, it is still available as an unlicensed drug for people who can’t find a suitable alternativ­e.

One woman who suffers rheumatoid arthritis says: ‘Without co-proxamol, I’m in agony. I struggle to wash or dress myself, let alone anything else. I only need six tablets a day and that changes everything. It means I can get up and about, I can look after my grandchild, I can help at charity events – I feel like I am living.’

THE 72-year-old from London, who we are calling Jane to protect her identity, adds: ‘I have tried literally everything and I just found nothing else really works for this kind of chronic pain. Most of the alternativ­es, such as codeine or morphine, had horrible side effects like stomach problems or made me so drowsy I had to go to bed.’

Jane is reluctant to give details about how she obtains co-proxamol but indicates it comes from overseas. She also claims her private pain consultant in the UK knows she is taking it, but won’t offer her a prescripti­on.

Studies have shown that co-proxamol is no more effective as a painkiller than paracetamo­l, desthe being 28 times more likely to kill you if you overdose. But Jane insists she, and others like her, need the medication. ‘Obviously I have tried paracetamo­l, but even on the maximum daily dose it wasn’t working anywhere near as well,’ she says.

‘Co-proxamol is the only thing that keeps me going and makes me feel I can live a relatively normal life.’

However, pain expert Dr Nigel Kellow at The Wellington Hospital in North London warns: ‘There is no justificat­ion whatsoever for co-proxamol still being prescribed.

It is a dangerous drug which was withdrawn for a good reason a long time ago.’ Co-proxamol, sometimes known by the trade names Distalgesi­c, Cosalgesic or Dolgesic, is a combinatio­n of the weak painkiller dextroprop­oxyphene and a low dose of paracetamo­l, and it was once one of the most commonly prescribed drugs in England.

It binds to receptors within nervous system to dull the body’s sense of pain, but can cause respirator­y depression, where the lungs don’t take in oxygen or remove carbon dioxide efficientl­y, as well as interfere with the electrical activity of the heart, potentiall­y triggering heart attacks or heart failure.

In addition, it is relatively easy to overdose on it accidental­ly, because the margin between the amount needed to feel the painkillin­g effect and a toxic dose is very small, with some people reportedly dying from as few as two extra tablets.

The effects are worsened by alcohol, and death can occur very quickly – often within an hour.

Co-proxamol was patented in 1955, but by the mid-1960s concerns started being raised about unexpected deaths and its use in suicide. In 1985, health authoritie­s labelled it ‘less suitable for prescribin­g’ in an attempt to dissuade GPs from handing it out. But up to 400 people every year continued to die after taking co-proxamol – about a fifth of them accidental­ly. By the late 1990s, it was responsibl­e for one in 20 of all UK suicides and one in five of those involving drugs.

As the evidence against co-proxamol grew, in January 2005 the MHRA announced it was withdrawin­g its licence, with the change coming into effect by the end of 2007. This meant it was no longer regulated for safety, and doctors could prescribe it only if they took personal responsibi­lity for the consequenc­es – if the patient has an adverse reaction or dies, they could be struck off or face legal action.

Following the withdrawal, prescripti­ons for co-proxamol in England plummeted from about 7.2 million a year in 2004 to around 275,000 by 2009.

As a result, some 600 deaths – including 500 suicides – had been prevented by 2010, according to an Oxford University study. Researcher­s found no compensato­ry increase in other drug deaths, despite a significan­t increase in prescripti­ons for painkiller­s such as co-codamol, paracetamo­l, co-dydramol and codeine – clearly indicating that coproxamol itself, not just painkiller­s in general, was a risk.

FOLLOWING the success of the UK’s withdrawal, similar bans followed in Europe, the US and Canada, among others. The case against co-proxamol seemed clear-cut – but the statistics tell only half the story.

Many doctors and patients disagreed with the statement made in 2005 by Professor Sir Gordon Duff, then chairman of the Committee on Safety of Medicines, that there was no one for whom the benefits of taking co-proxamol outweighed the risks.

And a poll in the medical magazine Pulse in 2006 found that 70 per cent of GPs and 94 per cent of rheumatolo­gy consultant­s – experts in treating arthritis and other painful joint conditions – wanted the decipite

sion to withdraw it reversed. During a House of Commons debate on the issue in 2007, GP and thenLabour MP Howard Stoate quoted one consultant who claimed it was an ‘invaluable’ drug for patients with chronic rheumatic pain. ‘Its withdrawal has caused enormous distress for a large number of patients who have found it to be safe, effective and free of side effects,’ he added.

Since then, many chronic pain patients with illnesses such as rheumatoid arthritis or degenerati­ve spine conditions have campaigned for co-proxamol to be reinstated.

‘The problem with finding alternativ­es is that we have very few pharmacolo­gical options available,’ says Professor Philip Conaghan, a rheumatolo­gist at Leeds University and the charity Versus Arthritis.

He explains that many opioids – a class of strong morphine-like painkiller­s that includes co-proxamol – can cause dependency or addiction, while non-steroidal anti-inflammato­ry drugs such as ibuprofen can cause complicati­ons for people with heart or kidney disease. ‘This very much highlights the need for more research into better treatments, and more safe and effective medicines for people with chronic pain and arthritis,’ he adds.

Dr Arun Bhaskar, president of the British Pain Society, as well as a pain consultant at Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust and the private Leva Clinic, believes that although there are risks, some patients might benefit from taking co-proxamol. This is because some people feel no benefit from other types of opioids, such as codeine, because their body lacks a particular enzyme needed to process them. ‘How do we justify denying somebody a medication when they claim it works a treat for them?’ he says.

Although studies show co-proxamol works little better for long-term pain than paracetamo­l, he adds: ‘As a pain consultant, my job is to ensure patients are happy and managing their pain. What’s wrong with a placebo effect?

‘With a purely scientific hat on, I have to go by what the published evidence says. But there is a small group of patients who swear by it. They have tried everything else and it hasn’t worked.’

Dr Bhaskar believes most patients still taking co-proxamol are highly aware of the risks.

‘The analogy I use is that we all have kitchen knives in our houses but most of us are able to use those without harming ourselves or others,’ he explains.

‘These are people who are completely switched on and are very responsibl­e about how they take their medication­s. Their treating doctors have gone through the alternativ­e options and safety checks and felt this was the best option for them.’

But Dr Kellow, who specialise­s in treating back pain, argues the only reason NHS patients are receiving co-proxamol is because GPs are either unwilling or unable to challenge stubborn patients or find time to review their medication­s.

‘There will be a small number of patients who are very resistant to stopping or changing medication because they are addicted to it,’ Dr Kellow adds. ‘It can be quite difficult for a GP because they don’t want the relationsh­ip of trust to break down, so sometimes it’s easier to keep them on it.’

One GP admitted as much when they revealed why they were still prescribin­g co-proxamol in an anonymous entry in the online pharmacy journal C&D. ‘I should have enough gumption to simply say “Enough and no more” to my tiny handful of co-proxamol devotees,’ the GP wrote. ‘But, in reality, when you’re running late, they’ve got numerous other symptoms still to sort, the ten-minute clock is ticking and the waiting room is heaving, it’s hard not to bail out by doing what’s most expedient.’

In the meantime, the cost of coproxamol rocketed from an average of £1.40 per prescripti­on in 2004 to £252 in 2020.

Professor Martin Marshall, chairman of the Royal College of GPs Council, says doctors are concerned by blanket bans of any drug and must be allowed to use their discretion. He adds: ‘It is vitally important that GPs continue to be able to make decisions, based on their expert training and experience, in the best interests of individual patients, taking into account their unique physical, psychologi­cal and social circumstan­ces.’

Until 2015, patients deemed to need co-proxamol could be given it on a so-called named patient basis, which allowed GPs to prescribe some unlicensed drugs. But it was removed from the list of treatments available to the NHS, meaning it was only available as an expensive ‘special item’ prescripti­on.

Then in 2017, NHS England added it to an additional list of treatments GPs should not prescribe – but they still can, legally, if they are able to prove there is no other treatment they can offer to relieve their patients’ symptoms.

‘For co-proxamol, which doesn’t work very well compared with other medicines, the risk of overdose is not worth taking,’ states an NHS leaflet handed out to patients who want the drug. It also makes clear cost is an issue, adding: ‘The price is too high for a drug that doesn’t work as well as others.’

IT MEANS that while the number of prescripti­ons for the drug has fallen by 99.8 per cent over the past 15 years, the NHS’s annual bill for it has only dropped from £10million to £2.5million. ‘The price is likely to have been put up by the manufactur­er to recoup their losses in the number of people who are being taken off this medication,’ says Hussain Abdeh, superinten­dent pharmacist at Medicine Direct.

Unsurprisi­ngly, the number of GPs willing to prescribe a drug now considered both unsafe and expensive continues to dwindle.

There has also been a shift in the way chronic pain is treated.

With about one in three Britons in daily pain – driven by an ageing population and rising obesity levels – doctors are moving from handing out repeat prescripti­ons of painkiller­s which, evidence shows, may cut pain by only about 30 to 50 per cent. Instead they are advised to encourage other forms of pain relief, including heat packs and exercise.

Treatment delays caused by Covid may have changed this picture – research suggests the number of patients using powerful opioid painkiller­s while awaiting surgery has increased by 40 per cent compared with pre-pandemic levels.

Dr Kellow says patients taking co-proxamol should ask their GPs for help switching to an alternativ­e – and GPs should seek out patients to make sure they come off it.

‘Co-proxamol has been discontinu­ed for a very good reason and we should comply with the rules instead of seeking out loopholes and exceptions,’ he adds.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom