Pubdate: 09 Feb 2001 Source: Courier-Journal, The (KY) Copyright: 2001 The Courier-Journal Contact: http://www.courier-journal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/97 Author: Dick Kaukas ABUSE TAINTS DRUG'S REPUTATION Medical Workers, Patients Praise Pain Reliever Jill Berger said she was "shocked" to hear that OxyContin, a narcotic that eased the pain of her herniated disc, had become "the street drug of choice" in Eastern Kentucky. "I'm disappointed that this has happened," Berger said, "because it means some people might not get the help they need" from the powerful pain reliever that can be addictive -- but can also help people with everything from cancer to back pain. Berger, who is coordinator for the Center for Pain Management at Baptist Hospital East in Louisville, said she and others there first heard late last summer that OxyContin, a time-release medicine designed to provide pain relief for 12 hours, was being abused. Earlier this week, U.S. Attorney Joseph Famularo announced that overdoses of OxyContin had killed 59 Kentuckians in the past 13 months, and that more than 200 people had been indicted in an investigation of trafficking in the drug. Among other practices, people reportedly were chewing the prescription drug to get high from it quickly. The manufacturer, Purdue Pharma of Norwalk, Conn., warns that chewing the tablets could lead to "rapid release" of a "potentially toxic dose" of OxyContin. Berger said yesterday that she feared the publicity about the abuse of the drug might make some doctors reluctant to prescribe it, fearing they would risk investigation if they did. Leaders of the new Appalachian Pain Foundation made a similar point at a news conference yesterday. They said news articles about illegal traffic in OxyContin and similar drugs will make it harder to provide adequate pain treatment. Purdue Pharma, which makes OxyContin, has given a $25,000 a challenge grant to help finance the operations of the pain foundation, based in Huntington, W.Va. Stories about the abuse of OxyContin and other painkillers make some patients reluctant to take the drugs, Dr. J. David Haddoz, who is Purdue Pharma's medical director, said at the news conference. Berger and several physicians who prescribe OxyContin agreed that the medication can help patients deal with cancer and other forms of pain that can be difficult to manage. It helped her last July, Berger said, when a herniated disc left her in agony. Quick-acting pain relievers made her comfortable for a while, but "they didn't last the night, and I'd wake up with my back hurting like crazy," Berger said. She talked to her pain doctors, they prescribed OxyContin, and she took 10 milligram doses for about three weeks. "It got the pain under control, and kept it there," Berger said. "It gave nice, even, steady relief, and it didn't make me sleepy or dopey." She was able to ride to Florida for a vacation with her husband, Bob, and their two children. She tapered off and stopped taking the medicine as her pain eased. "I am sold on it," Berger said. So are some doctors who treat cancer patients. "It's probably the No. 1 medicine we prescribe for cancer pain," said Dr. Charles Louis Dannaher, a hematologist who practices with eight other physicians in Louisville's East End. "We prescribe a lot of it," Dannaher said, adding that he came to rely on OxyContin after patients told him it made them comfortable, and reduced the nausea and constipation associated with other powerful painkillers like morphine. "This is a good medicine," Dannaher said. Dr. Joseph Rotella, medical director for Hospice and Palliative Care of Louisville, which cares for people with terminal illnesses and their families, said he, too, prescribes OxyContin for some patients, but it is not his first choice. "Used properly, it's about as effective and safe as using morphine," Rotella said. But he typically prescribes morphine first because it is available in so many forms -- liquid, pill, time-release tablet and injection -- and because its effectiveness has been established by many studies. Besides, Rotella said, OxyContin, which came on the market about five years ago, is much more expensive. A 30-day supply of time-release, 30-milligram morphine, for example, costs about $75 at one Louisville pharmacy, while a similar dose of OxyContin that would last only 15 days was about $155. He would prescribe OxyContin, Rotella said, to see if it helped patients who couldn't tolerate the side effects of morphine, such as nausea and constipation, or who reported it wasn't controlling their pain. Doctors who treat patients for a broader range of problems -- everything from cancer to sore backs and limbs -- say OxyContin has a place in their practices as well. Dr. Kevin O'Keefe, an anesthesiologist at Baptist East's pain center, said "we are very selective about who gets it" because "it can be habit-forming" and there are often ways to relieve back pain and other problems without using such powerful drugs. Dr. Kunnathu Geeverghese, an anesthesiologist who treats pain patients at Caritas Medical Center, said that while some doctors prescribe OxyContin commonly, he tends to use it only when other medications or treatments don't work. "This medication is not for the first line of treatment, but it can really help people when they have nowhere else to go," Geeverghese said. Dr. Jeffrey Berg, an anesthesiologist at Norton Audubon Hospital's Pain Management Center, agreed. He said OxyContin can be excellent for cancer pain, and for some other patients. "But personally I much prefer using shorter-acting pills," Berg said. He fears the timed-release drug, which stays in the bloodstream longer, may tend to make some patients more dependent on it than other medicines. "I do have patients on OxyContin," Berg said, including a woman in her 80s with severe pelvic pain. "It gives her a little relief," Berg said. "She has no quality of life without it."