Pubdate: Fri, 5 Apr 2002 Source: Loudoun Times-Mirror (VA) Copyright: 2002 Times Community Newspapers Contact: http://loudountimes.com/ Feedback: http://www.timespapers.com/projects/contactus/index.php?filename=lettersbox.html Author: Jon Echtenkamp Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin) SHERIFF REVEALS OXYCONTIN LINK TO HOMICIDE Sheriff Steve Simpson dropped a bombshell last week when he revealed for the first time that the controversial prescription painkiller OxyContin was stolen last year during a homicide that remains unsolved. Simpson's admission came during a meeting at county hall convened by Rep. Frank R. Wolf (R-10th District) to discuss the dangers of the illegal use of OxyContin in light of several recent armed robberies where OxyContin was stolen from local pharmacies. OxyContin is an opium-based painkiller related to heroin and morphine that is manufactured by Purdue Pharma in time-release pill form. Although it is a powerful prescription painkiller for treatment of chronic, severe pain, the drug also has gained popularity among abusers who crush the pills into powder, defeating the time-release mechanism, and then snort or inject it for an immediate, highly addictive high. Abuse of the drug has devastated entire communities in southwest Virginia and other areas of Appalachia, Wolf said, where robberies, overdose deaths and homicides associated with its use have become commonplace. "It's kind of scary," Simpson said, noting those problems could spread here "if we don't get real aggressive real quickly." Simpson said there have been two cases of prescription fraud associated with OxyContin in the last year and three robberies, which occurred at pharmacies in Sterling in January and February. A Reston man has been arrested in connection with one of those robberies. Simpson's remark about the theft of OxyContin during an unsolved homicide was a reference to the May 21 killing of Patrick B. Hornbaker, who was found shot to death at his home off Route 9 near the West Virginia border. Hornbaker had received treatment for chronic pain since he was severely injured in a police pursuit years earlier. Authorities had privately conceded Hornbaker had been using OxyContin, but had never before admitted that the drug was stolen from the house during the killing. Simpson's admission raised the possibility that a drug abuser's interest in obtaining the OxyContin may have been the motive behind the killing, and the possibility that the problems associated with OxyContin are more dire here than previously believed. Wolf, who held a Congressional hearing on the illegal use of the drug in December, said controlling the spread of its abuse is the priority. Wolf's subcommittee has a spending bill that directs the Drug Enforcement Administration to develop a coordinated strategy addressing the drug's illegal abuse. The bill also authorizes $2 million for states to develop prescription drug monitoring programs to track doctor, pharmacy and patient information as a means to squelch illegal practices. "We don't want this to come to this region," Wolf said of the problems. "We want to keep it from spreading ... , and we want to wipe it out." Drug Enforcement Administration officials at the meeting talked of the challenges OxyContin poses when compared to other prescription drugs that use the same active ingredient. Percoset and Percodan, for instance, contain about 5 or 10 mg of the active ingredient oxycodone, and mix it with aspirin or acetaminophin that can cause liver problems in abusers, the officials said. OxyContin, however, contains up to 80 mg of oxycodone with no diluting aspirin or acetaminophen. Purdue Pharma even distributed the drug in a 160 mg form in summer 2000, a formulation it has since withdrawn. Thus, officials said, an abuser intent on using OxyContin could get a dose of the heroin-like oxycodone up to 16 times stronger than what they might get from abusing Percoset or Percodan. Purdue's sales of OxyContin topped $1 billion in 2000, with more than two million prescriptions, DEA officials said. Pharmacy thefts have been a problem nationally. In Boston, robbers held nursing home residents and staff at bay while they collected OxyContin. In Maine, abusers have altered prescription pads, writing in OxyContin in place of other medicines prescribed by doctors. In Mexico in October, nine armed robbers stole 900,000 OxyContin pills. "We're not quite sure where they ended up after that," said one DEA official. Elsewhere, even doctors have been implicated in illegally or improperly prescribing the drug to abusers. A Florida doctor was convicted last week of manslaughter in the deaths of four patients who died from OxyContin overdoses, the first time a doctor has been found guilty of manslaughter or murder in an OxyContin death. Wolf said Purdue is working on a "narcotic antagonist" that will disable the drug's potency if an abuser tries to crush the pills into powder, but the company has not announced any timetable for when such a technology might be incorporated into the pills. If OxyContin, when abused, shares the potential addictive properties of other opium-based products such as heroin, its availability increases the challenges for authorities. Unlike heroin, which is typically smuggled into the country and must be purchased in proverbial dark alleys, OxyContin is manufactured here, marketed to family physicians and distributed in neighborhood pharmacies. Wolf sent the General Accounting Office a letter in December requesting a probe of the company's marketing practices for the drug. He asked in the letter: "Did the Food and Drug Administration mis-classify this powerful narcotic for moderate to severe pain when it should have been limited to treating chronic, severe pain?... Did the company market this drug as a more effective replacement for other less addictive drugs? Is there a direct correlation between the marketing strategies of the drug and its excessive abuse?" - --- MAP posted-by: Josh