Pubdate: Mon, 6 Aug 2001 Source: U.S. News and World Report (US) Copyright: 2001 U.S. News & World Report Section: Science & Ideas Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/464 Website: http://www.usnews.com/ Author: Carolyn Kleiner Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?186 (Oxycontin) A CURSE AND A CURE Is The Crackdown On An Abused Drug Causing Needless Suffering? Jeanette Murray had spent more than a decade caring for others, both as a neonatal nurse and a mother of two. Suddenly she couldn't even care for herself. A workplace fall in 1999 caused irreparable nerve damage in her right arm, and near-constant, burning pain that radiated all the way up to her neck. Barely able to get out of bed–much less return to work or do simple tasks like cooking dinner–Murray tried treatment after treatment, from physical therapy and surgery to more than a dozen powerful prescription medications, including Darvoset and Lortab. But only one remedy worked. OxyContin is a highly regulated, opium-based painkiller that was approved for treating moderate to severe pain in 1995. It quickly became regarded as a major breakthrough, thanks to a unique time-release delivery system that produces a steady amount of oxycodone, its active ingredient, in the bloodstream for up to 12 hours. "All I know is it worked better than anything else," says Murray, now 31, who started taking 40-mg pills twice a day and found she could finally bathe and dress herself again. "I felt hope for the first time." Some 18 months later, her miracle cure has become as much a cause of anxiety as a source of relief. The same chemical formulation that makes OxyContin such an effective pain treatment also makes it a prime candidate for abuse. In recent months, reports of people grinding, snorting, injecting–and becoming addicted to–the drug have mushroomed, beginning in rural areas such as Appalachia and Maine but slowly spreading across the country. Backlash. Reaction has been swift, in the form of lurid media reports as well as federal and local crackdowns on doctors and pharmacies with questionable practices. Three class action lawsuits have charged the drug's manufacturer, Purdue Pharma, with inappropriate, aggressive marketing and failure to warn of possible addiction. Further, last week the FDA announced that OxyContin packaging will now bear the agency's strongest warning, which cautions that the drug is potentially addictive and can kill when used incorrectly. Purdue had already stopped shipping the most potent 160-mg Oxy pill; now, in an attempt to save its billion-dollar market, the company is alerting 800,000 healthcare workers to the more stringent recommendations. While it's clear that abuse of OxyContin is a serious and growing problem, many doctors are now just as concerned that such measures will have unintended consequences for patients like Murray, who are in legitimate need of pain relief. Pain care in this country is already characterized by widespread undertreatment and stigma, and the worry is that doctors, pharmacies, and insurance companies will overreact–to avoid addicting patients or to avoid prosecution, or both. "The big question here is what should drive medical care policy–police concerns or clinical concerns," says Richard Weiner, executive director of the American Academy of Pain Management. He contends that when taken as directed, OxyContin is a safe, effective pain medication with few side effects, and that reports of related deaths almost always involve other substances. The roughly one million legitimate patients using the drug aren't the ones getting hooked, agrees J. S. Hochman, a Houston-based pain specialist. He cites myriad studies showing that patients properly treated with opiates have about a 1 percent chance of becoming addicted. "They don't get goofy, high, or giddy, and there's no euphoria–the pain is simply gone." Still, patients around the country testify to a noticeable chilling effect in recent months. Murray was recently refused treatment at a local hospital in southwest Virginia, where physicians accused her of seeking drugs for recreational use. Though she has a documented medical history, she has also had problems with her workers' comp carrier regarding continued coverage. "When people see the name OxyContin, they automatically think you're a junkie," laments Murray. Wary Doctors. John Murman Jr., who was injured in a car accident several years ago and now suffers from multiple herniated disks, bone spurs, and other back problems, knows this all too well. Earlier this year, the 33-year-old Pittston, Pa., resident began taking his medical diagnosis with him to the drugstore, after one local pharmacist refused to fill his prescription–even after checking with his doctor. He visited 10 other stores before locating one that stocked his full dose. Still, these were just inconveniences compared with what happened in June, when Murman's family physician said he had to "get him off these Oxys." When Murman complained that he needed some sort of pain relief, his doctor told him to go elsewhere. Specialists like Hochman in Houston report an influx of patients in similarly desperate situations, some of whom now travel cross country for care. Such stories signal an unfortunate shift in attitude toward the treatment of chronic pain, which affects some 50 million Americans. Though only 1 in 4 of these people receives adequate care even now, the past decade has seen vast improvements in pain management. The long-standing myths regarding opiates have been largely overcome, as doctors–including family practitioners–have grown more comfortable treating chronic but not life-threatening pain. In January, the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Health Care Organizations, which certifies some 19,000 hospitals and clinics, implemented new standards for pain treatment; the commission suggests that pain be treated as a fifth "vital sign," along with blood pressure, pulse, respiration, and temperature. None of this provides much comfort to John Murman, whose new pain specialist will not prescribe OxyContin because of all the negative attention; his new medication has not proved as effective. "I just want my pain treated the best as it can be while leaving my mind clear, so I can have some semblance of a career and a life. Is that too much to ask?" - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake