Pubdate: Thu, 20 Jun 2002 Source: Inquirer (PA) Contact: 2002 Philadelphia Newspapers Inc Website: http://inq.philly.com/content/inquirer/home/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/340 Author: Larry King, Inquirer Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) A DEADLY DRUG'S APPEAL NOT WANING Richard Paolino, once considered the area's top illicit supplier of the narcotic painkiller OxyContin, has been jailed since his arrest in March 2001. The former Bensalem doctor is set to be sentenced today, and he could spend the rest of his life behind bars. But sidelining Paolino apparently has done little to slow the abuse of oxycodone - the active ingredient in OxyContin and similar drugs - which can give a heroin-like high if taken incorrectly. "I don't want to underestimate the impact of his arrest," said Philadelphia Police Inspector Jeremiah Daley, until recently in charge of the city's narcotics division. Paolino "was a huge purveyor, but I also don't want to say that his arrest and conviction ended the problem." According to a survey of coroners and medical examiners, the drug caused or contributed to at least 92 deaths last year in the eight-county Philadelphia region, up slightly from 2000. >From a bustling family practice on Hulmeville Road, the physician wrote hundreds of unnecessary prescriptions for OxyContin, a potent, time-release form of oxycodone. Much of it turned up in blue-collar city neighborhoods along the Delaware River, until conscientious pharmacists called federal drug agents. Paolino, 59, never was charged with any deaths, but "there will be some lives saved as a result of his arrest," Bucks County District Attorney Diane E. Gibbons predicted last year. While that may be, police say other illicit sources have taken his place. In 2000, the Philadelphia Medical Examiner's Office found oxycodone in 41 cases. How many of those deaths were brought on by the drug is not known; no such breakdown was done then. But by any measure, the toll rose last year, when 47 city deaths were blamed, at least in part, on oxycodone, an ingredient used in a number of other prescription painkillers, including Percocet. This year is looking even darker, with 22 oxycodone-related deaths in Philadelphia through March. Things were better in the Pennsylvania suburbs. Last year's 21 oxycodone-related deaths across Bucks, Chester, Delaware and Montgomery Counties marked a 40 percent drop from 2000. "I think [drug abusers] got a little scared," said Halbert E. Fillinger Jr., medical examiner in Montgomery County, which, after eight oxycodone deaths in 2000, had none last year. In South Jersey, fatalities increased from 15 in 2000 to 24 last year across Burlington, Camden and Gloucester Counties, led by Camden's 11 deaths. "There's a surprising amount of oxycodone on the street," said George Mosee, the Philadelphia deputy district attorney who supervises narcotics prosecutions. "I say surprising because it shouldn't be that easy to get." In fact, the supply is soaring. Sales of OxyContin, first marketed in 1996, hit $1.2 billion last year. OxyContin is especially prized by abusers for its heroin-like euphoria. The pills contain large doses of pure oxycodone, but with a time-release coating for meting out 12-hour pain relief. Abusers break the coating to get the hit of a full dose at once, sometimes with fatal results. The federal Drug Enforcement Administration announced in April that OxyContin may have played a role in 464 deaths across the country in 2000-01. For the first time, the DEA specifically tied OxyContin to 146 of those deaths, meaning oxycodone helped cause the death and that some evidence of the product - a tablet in the body, a prescription, a witness's account - verified its use. An additional 318 deaths were labeled "OxyContin likely," meaning oxycodone was found in the body but that aspirin or acetaminophen were not. Those substances are found in other oxycodone-based drugs, such as Percocet, but not in OxyContin. "The recent media reports of 'hundreds of deaths' attributed to OxyContin can now be substantiated by credible scientific evidence," the DEA report said. The statistics were culled from a voluntary survey of medical examiners in 32 states, but DEA officials could not say how much of the populace it took in. OxyContin's manufacturer, Purdue Pharma Inc., has assailed the study as flawed. It hired a private-investigation firm to collect similar data from medical examiners, but has not completed its analysis, spokesman Timothy Bannon said. "We have been frustrated, having asked DEA to share their data, and they have refused," Bannon said. Purdue Pharma, he said, backs several initiatives to restrict oxycodone abuse, such as electronic registration of patients' prescriptions. The company also is trying to make an abuse-resistant OxyContin pill that would disable its active ingredients if it were crushed. Relatively few deaths result from oxycodone abuse alone, local statistics show. More often it is found comingled with alcohol or other drugs in an overdose victim's body. The Food and Drug Administration has said it sees no reason for people using OxyContin as prescribed to worry. For those who abuse it, police say, the publicity given the Paolino case has at least provided a cautionary tale. "The word got out that this is not small-time pill-popping, but that it can be deadly," Daley, the Philadelphia police inspector, said. Paolino, convicted of trafficking in OxyContin and other prescription drugs, could be given so many years in prison today that he would effectively be given a life sentence. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk