Pubdate: Tue, 12 Jun 2001 Source: Charleston Gazette (WV) Copyright: 2001 Charleston Gazette Contact: http://www.wvgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/77 Author: Charles Shumaker LAWSUIT TARGETS OXYCONTIN Mcgraw Calls Marketing 'Coercive And Deceptive' West Virginia Attorney General Darrell McGraw Jr. wants the company that makes the powerful painkiller OxyContin to stop pushing it on doctors who prescribe the drug to undeserving patients, according to a lawsuit filed Monday. In a case filed Monday in McDowell Circuit Court, McGraw alleges that the defendants have been "coercive and deceptive" in marketing OxyContin to doctors in order to make more money and form an illegal monopoly on the pain medication market. The suit names Purdue Pharma Inc., Purdue Pharma LP, the Purdue Frederick Company, Abbott Laboratories Inc. and Abbott Laboratories. "This has taken the market by storm over the past five years," McGraw said. "It is a major threat to public health in our area." Ten counties in Southern West Virginia account for 48 percent of the total OxyContin prescriptions paid for by DHHR, the lawsuit states. The drug was released in 1995 to help patients with cancer and other chronic pain. But some people have discovered a way to eliminate the drug's timed release - which was supposed to be it's biggest advantage - - and expose the pure oxycodone. In recent years, the drug has become a target for thieves in pharmacies, who can sell the drug on the streets for as much as $1 per milligram. Until this year, OxyContin was available in five strengths - 10, 20, 40, 80 and 160 milligrams. In May, less than one year after being introduced, Purdue Pharma pulled the 160 milligram tablets because of alleged abuse. When used properly, the drug can be very effective to treat pain, McGraw said Monday. Doctors and addiction specialists have backed up that claim in previous reports. In the suit, McGraw alleges that the defendants have used a marketing campaign that pressures West Virginia doctors to prescribe the drug, even if patients don't need it. Paul Nusbaum, secretary of the state Department of Health and Human Resources, said Monday that some doctors, especially in rural areas, have been pressured by drug representatives to prescribe the drug. "A lot of the use and the abuse is in small rural communities," Nusbaum said. "When you have rural physicians who are isolated and get visits from drug representatives, they are told that if they don't use this drug [OxyContin] that they can be sued for malpractice." Other doctors have been approached as well. In March, Dr. William Harris of Charleston said that he had been threatened for failing to prescribe OxyContin. One Purdue Pharma rep told Harris that he could be subject to a lawsuit if he didn't prescribe OxyContin for Osteoporosis. Harris said he refers his chronic pain patients to a pain specialist, so he resisted the sales pitch. "When he became irate," said Harris, "I threw him out of my office." He said he did not have similar problems with any other drug representatives. In May 2000, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued a stern warning to Purdue Pharma for a similar practice of misleading patients. A Purdue Pharma ad promised that OxyContin can be used as a first-line therapy for the treatment of arthritis, the FDA letter states. But FDA officials argued in the letter that this was not an effective use for the drug and issued the following statement: "You should immediately discontinue the use of this journal advertisement and all other promotional materials for OxyContin that contain the same or similar claims or presentations." The advertisement was withdrawn after the FDA's warning, the lawsuit states. McGraw alleges in the seven-count suit that the drug was marketed directly to consumers. An Internet site titled "Partners Against Pain," was established to promote the drug. In West Virginia alone, DHHR spent more than $4 million on 27,771 prescriptions for OxyContin in 2000. That's 2 percent of the prescription drug costs for that year, the suit states. And it's the highest rate for any drug prescribed, said Phil Lynch, DHHR deputy secretary. A negligence count in the suit states that the manufacturers had an obligation to exercise reasonable care in the marketing and making of the drug. The state seeks compensation on several of the counts to pay the state back for prescription costs and medical costs the state has paid as a result of the misuse of OxyContin. - --- MAP posted-by: Andrew