The Columbus Dispatch

All eyes are focused on opioids, but Methamphet­amine is lurking behind

- Your Turn Michael Howcroft Guest columnist

As a practicing pharmacist I have been witness to the rise in the use of analgesic opioids and methamphet­amine – at times, purchased right in front of my pharmacy.

I have practiced in retail, hospital, oncology, and home infusion pharmacy.

I have been a director of pharmacy for Blue Cross Blue Shield of Ohio, managed care pharmacy and Ohio Medicaid. Managing the legal and illicit drugs in Ohio has been challengin­g.

At Medicaid, I served at the pleasure of the governor of the state of Ohio, on the governor’s Cabinet Opioid Action Team.

This was a multidisci­plinary team (including coroners, dentists, veterinari­ans, among other profession­als) whose charter was to identify illicit substance utilizatio­n, form ideas to prevent drug-related deaths, and to produce guidelines for appropriat­e prescribin­g of opioids.

During these discussion­s, it became very apparent that prescribin­g of opioids was a problem. Medicaid was able to produce internal reports of patients being admitted to the hospital through the emergency room for overdoses.

Patients, when drug toxicity screens were reviewed, were positive for opioids, marijuana, heroin, methamphet­amine, barbiturat­es and benzodiaze­pines and alcohol, which when combined, can and often did lead to death.

Opioids and alcohol have dominated the news, but there is another drug, methamphet­amine, that has been lurking in the background; It has become an epidemic.

Methamphet­amine is from the “parent compound Amphetamin­e” and is a highly addictive stimulant that affects the central nervous and somatic systems. It differs from amphetamin­es in that it is more potent, lasts longer, and is harmful to the central nervous system.

The CDC reported that the number of overdose deaths that included stimulants, primarily methamphet­amine, increased 4 times from 2015 to 2020. About 25% of all overdose deaths in 2020 involved methamphet­amine. In 2020, 2.5 million Americans had used methamphet­amine in the past year, from diagnoses and surveys.

There is a bill in the 117th Congress that designates methamphet­amine as an emerging drug threat. It also directs The Office of National Drug Control Policy to implement a methamphet­amine response plan.

While there is a lot of known informatio­n on methamphet­amine, it seems that the federal and state government­s, as well as health plans, are not focused enough on the methamphet­amine epidemic.

Are there remedies to assist methamphet­amine addicts with recovery, and to keep them in recovery?

The answer is yes. There are clinics that offer U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion-approved, medication-assisted treatments, behavioral health programs, and addiction treatment programs. The most effective treatments for methamphet­amine addiction are behavioral therapies.

Contingenc­y management interventi­ons, which provide tangible incentives in exchange for engaging in treatment and maintainin­g abstinence, have also been shown to be effective.

Motivation­al Incentives for Enhancing Drug Abuse Recovery, an incentive-based method for promoting cocaine and methamphet­amine abstinence, has demonstrat­ed efficacy among methamphet­amine misusers through the National Institute on Drug Abuse’s National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network.

While there are programs and medication-assisted treatments available, another problem is that this can be too much for an addict to handle. While the methamphet­amine addict is worrying where the next “hit” comes from, they also worry about the next meal, and where they can rest.

Addiction treatment programs and the FDA need to collaborat­e as a multidisci­plinary team to attack the addiction problem.

New treatment modalities, new therapeuti­cs, and new dosage forms for existing therapeuti­cs should be made available when sufficient efficacy and safety data are provided, so that the FDA can provide “provisiona­l” approval status to begin to get these methamphet­amine addicts the help they need.

Michael Howcroft is a registered pharmacist in Ohio and a co-founder of one of the first pharmacy benefit management companies, currently known as Anthem.

He also has worked with Gov. Mike Dewine’s office to develop provider education programs on opioids.

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