Los Angeles Times

Senator urges probe of painkiller maker

The call comes after a Times report on OxyContin’s effects wearing off early.

- By Harriet Ryan

A U.S. senator on Friday called for federal investigat­ions of OxyContin’s manufactur­er in response to a Los Angeles Times report that found the bestsellin­g painkiller wears off early in many patients, exposing them to increased risk of addiction.

Sen. Edward J. Markey, a Massachuse­tts Democrat whose state has been hit hard by prescripti­on drug abuse, urged the Justice Department, the Food and Drug Administra­tion and the Federal Trade Commission to launch probes of drugmaker Purdue Pharma.

OxyContin’s main selling point is that it lasts 12 hours. The Times investigat­ion published this month found that when the effects don’t last, patients can suffer symptoms of narcotic withdrawal, including intense craving for the drug, and experience a cycle of agony and relief that experts say promotes addiction.

The newspaper found that Purdue had evidence of the problem for more than two decades but continued to insist, in part to protect its revenue, that the drug lasted 12 hours. OxyContin’s market dominance and premium price hinge on its 12hour duration. Purdue instructed doctors who complained about the drug’s duration to prescribe stronger, but not more frequent, doses. Research shows that patients taking high doses of opioids are at greater risk of an overdose and death.

“These are serious allegation­s,” Markey wrote of The Times’ findings in a letter to Atty. Gen. Loretta Lynch. “They raise questions about ongoing deception by Purdue, harm to the public, continued costs to the United

States, and the availabili­ty of further judicial recourse against Purdue…”

In a separate letter to the heads of the FDA and the FTC, Markey called OxyContin “a leading culprit in the current opioid and heroin overdose epidemic.” More than 194,000 people have died from overdoses involving opioid painkiller­s since 1999, and abuse of those drugs is blamed for the resurgence in heroin addiction in the United States. Markey said the agencies should “proactivel­y warn prescriber­s, patients and the general public” about problems the newspaper identified with OxyContin.

Purdue, a family-owned Connecticu­t company that has collected more than $31 billion from OxyContin sales, rejected The Times’ findings. In a statement, the company said Purdue shared Markey’s concerns about the opioid epidemic but noted that the FDA approved OxyContin as a 12hour drug.

“We promote our medicines only within the parameters approved by FDA and, given FDA has not approved OxyContin for eight-hour use, we do not recommend that dosing to prescriber­s,” the statement said.

A Justice Department spokesman said the department was reviewing the letter, and an FTC spokesman confirmed the agency had received the letter but declined to comment.

An FDA spokeswoma­n said the agency was reviewing the letter and would respond directly to Markey. Previously, the agency spokeswoma­n told The Times the FDA “will revise labeling as necessary to improve proper prescribin­g and treatment,” but also placed responsibi­lity with doctors.

“It should be well understood by physicians that there will be some individual variabilit­y in the length of time that patients respond to this drug,” the spokeswoma­n

said.

Dr. Lewis Nelson, a New York University professor of emergency medicine who has advised the FDA on risks of prescripti­on opioids, said that in his experience teaching physicians around the nation, many have forgotten their medical school training about how opioids work in individual­s.

“I don’t think the average doctor would recall the difference between changing a dose to q8,” medical shorthand for every eight hours, “or increasing the dose,” Nelson said. He said The Times’ findings were credible and the FDA “should change the label.”

“It would seem like this is a very fixable problem,” Nelson said.

OxyContin’s history is inextricab­ly linked with the prescripti­on drug epidemic. Purdue launched the drug in 1996 with an aggressive marketing campaign to primary care doctors that presented the painkiller as appropriat­e treatment for backaches and knee pain. Purdue and three company executives pleaded guilty in 2007 to federal charges of drug misbrandin­g for what the company acknowledg­ed was an attempt to downplay OxyContin’s risk of addiction. They were ordered to pay $635 million.

Markey has been an outspoken critic of the role of pharmaceut­ical companies and the FDA in the opioid crisis. In January, he temporaril­y blocked the nomination of Dr. Robert Califf as FDA commission­er to protest the agency’s approval process for opioids, including its August decision to approve OxyContin for use in children as young as 11. Califf was later confirmed.

“OxyContin is the original sin of the current opioid epidemic,” Markey said in a statement to The Times. “For years, Purdue Pharma lied to federal regulators and the public about the addictiven­ess of OxyContin and countless patients got hooked

on this deadly painkiller. We need to know if Purdue once again lied about the longevity of OxyContin’s pain-relieving properties and hold Purdue accountabl­e.”

Markey’s focus on opioids reflects Massachuse­tts’ severe problem with painkiller­s and heroin, which has been embraced by many prescripti­on drug addicts as a cheaper alternativ­e to pills. The death rate from opioid overdoses is more than twice the national average — and climbing. More than 1,300 people died from opioid-related causes last year, according to the Massachuse­tts Department of Public Health.

“Four people die every day and we haven’t been able to bend the trend,” said Marylou Sudders, the commonweal­th’s secretary of health and human services. “That’s not a problem. That is a crisis.”

Sudders attributed the problem, in part, to doctors over-prescribin­g opioids. A state law passed in March requires doctors to receive additional training and limits first-time opioid prescripti­ons to seven days.

The Times’ report concerned an issue that went largely unnoticed in the scrutiny of OxyContin: the drug’s duration. Purdue’s clinical trials demonstrat­ed the problem. In the first test on patients, for example, OxyContin wore off early in about half of participan­ts.

After the drug hit the market, the company was confronted with additional evidence, including complaints from doctors and research by outside scientists.

In his letter to Lynch, Markey wrote that “if warranted,” the Justice Department should try to recoup “taxpayer dollars that federal healthcare programs may have needlessly and unnecessar­ily spent on OxyContin prescripti­ons.”

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