The Columbus Dispatch

Pharmacies face first opioid trial

Response by companies, harm to counties in focus

- Mark Gillispie

CLEVELAND – So many prescripti­on painkiller­s were dispensed in Lake County, Ohio, between 2012 and 2016 that the amount equaled 265 pills for every resident. Just to the south, the flood of prescripti­on opioids during the same period equated to 400 pills for every resident of Trumbull County.

Attorneys say efforts to address the ensuing overdose epidemic has cost each of the financially struggling counties at least $1 billion. Now those counties want major national pharmacy chains that were involved in much of that distributi­on to pay.

In a bellwether federal trial starting Monday in Cleveland, Lake and Trumbull counties will try to convince a jury that the retail pharmacy companies played an outsized role in creating a public nuisance in the way they dispensed pain medication into their communitie­s.

This will be the first time pharmacy companies, in this case CVS, Walgreens, Giant Eagle and Walmart, have gone to trial to defend themselves in the nation’s ongoing legal reckoning over the opioid crisis. The trial, which is expected to last around six weeks, could set the tone for similar lawsuits against retail pharmacy chains by government entities across the U.S.

The trial will center on the harm to the counties and the response by the pharmacy chains, which have argued in court filings that their pharmacist­s were merely filling prescripti­ons written by physicians for legitimate medical needs. The trial also has a human dimension, watched closely by those whose family members are part of the roughly 500,000 Americans whose deaths are attributed to opioid abuse over the past two decades.

“People need to realize that drug addiction is a family disease, and everyone in the family is affected by it,” said Sharon Grover, whose daughter died after becoming addicted to prescripti­on pain pills and then heroin. “I’m never going to be the same.”

Grover, who lives in the small Trumbull County community of Mesopotami­a Township, said she believes her daughter, Rachael Realini, started using prescripti­on painkiller­s around 2013, but missed any signs of her addiction. By 2016, she told her mother she needed help. When pain pills became scarce, she turned to heroin to feed her habit.

“She looked terrible,” Grover said of her daughter, a registered nurse and mother of two small children. “We hugged, and I told her we would get through this.”

Attempts at rehabilita­tion in Ohio and Florida failed. Realini was found dead at her home in April 2017 from a fentanyl overdose, an autopsy showed. No other drugs were in her system.

An attorney for the counties, Frank Gallucci, said that is similar to the pattern seen throughout their communitie­s: Heroin and synthetic fentanyl have largely replaced prescripti­on painkiller­s, which have been harder to obtain as the industry has been forced to dial back on dispensing.

Another major pharmacy chain, Riteaid, settled with Lake and Trumbull

counties, which are located outside Cleveland. The Trumbull settlement was $1.5 million; the Lake County amount has not been disclosed.

The trial starting Monday before U.S. District Judge Dan Polster is part of a broader constellat­ion of federal opioid lawsuits – about 3,000 in all – that have been consolidat­ed under the judge’s supervisio­n.

Jim Misocky, an attorney and special projects coordinato­r in Trumbull County, along with Lake County Administra­tor Jason Boyd, said the ongoing opioid crisis has been a burden financially. They cited increased costs for their courts, jails, foster care, law enforcemen­t and addiction treatment

The financial burden is especially acute in Trumbull County, where there have been thousands of job losses in recent years in steelmakin­g, auto manufactur­ing and automotive supply companies.

“It’s been a big hit on the budget,” Misocky said. “We don’t have a lot of wealth in this community.”

Trumbull County has had to hire a part-time pathologis­t in the county coroner’s office, Misocky said. When the county morgue fills up, bodies are sent to Cleveland or Lake County for autopsies.

Lake County’s Boyd said addiction treatment facilities there are “well beyond capacity.”

Attorneys for the two counties say 80 million prescripti­on painkiller­s were dispensed in Trumbull between 2012 and 2016, according to data made public earlier through the court. In Lake County, it was 61 million pills. In trial briefs, the pharmacy companies argue that they followed guidelines establishe­d by the U.S. Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion and the state of Ohio in how their stores dispensed painkiller­s.

Attorneys for CVS, based in Rhode Island, said the allegation­s against the company “are completely unfounded.”

“The evidence presented at trial will show not only that CVS met the legal requiremen­ts for distributi­ng prescripti­on opioid medication­s in Lake and Trumbull Counties, but that it exceeded them,” attorneys for the company wrote.

Attorneys for Illinois-based Walgreens said the two counties were using “confused and contradict­ory legal theories against other defendants before they landed on the idea to sue retail pharmacy chains.”

The trial will be the fourth in the U.S. this year to test claims brought by government­s against different players in the drug industry over the toll of prescripti­on painkiller­s.

With trials ongoing and others queued up, many of the most prominent defendants have already reached settlement­s. Sometimes, they involve a small number of government­s or just one defendant such as Rite Aid.

The nation’s three largest drug distributi­on companies, Amerisourc­ebergen, Cardinal Health and Mckesson, along with drugmaker Johnson & Johnson, reached a $26 billion nationwide settlement earlier this year. A federal bankruptcy judge recently approved a settlement for Purdue Pharma, the maker of Oxycontin, that is potentiall­y worth $10 billion. The global consulting firm Mckinsey & Company earlier this year agreed to pay nearly $600 million for its role in advising drug makers on how to boost sales of prescripti­on opioid painkiller­s.

 ?? TONY DEJAK/AP ?? Sharon Grover believes her daughter, Rachael, started using prescripti­on painkiller­s around 2013 but missed any signs of her addiction as her daughter, the oldest of five children, remained distanced.
TONY DEJAK/AP Sharon Grover believes her daughter, Rachael, started using prescripti­on painkiller­s around 2013 but missed any signs of her addiction as her daughter, the oldest of five children, remained distanced.

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