Pubdate: Wed, 25 May 2005 Source: Fort Pierce Tribune (FL) Copyright: 2005 The E.W. Scripps Co. Contact: http://www.tcpalm.com/tcp/tribune Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2050 Author: Derek Simmonsen, staff writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?232 (Chronic Pain) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) PHARMACISTS EXPRESS CONCERN OVER QUANTITY OF LUYAO PRESCRIPTIONS FORT PIERCE -- Prosecutors rested their case against a Port St. Lucie physician Tuesday with testimony from pharmacists concerned about large quantities of high-dose painkiller prescriptions coming from her office. Four area pharmacists said red flags were raised about prescriptions from Dr. Asuncion Luyao's office, and they called her often to make sure she hadn't made mistakes. Luyao, 63, faces charges of racketeering, manslaughter and trafficking in oxycodone, and is accused of contributing to the deaths of six patients. John Manochio, a former pharmacist with Jackson Drugs in Fort Pierce, said many Luyao patients looked younger than the typical pain patient and didn't appear to be in much pain. "They were larger quantities than a normal person would use," he said of the prescriptions. "Our concern was the patient was taking too many OxyContins." It wasn't unusual for patients to come in days early for prescriptions or go to the pharmacists with stories about lost or stolen pills, they said. After a call to Luyao's office, the doctor would always tell the pharmacists to fill the order. Mary Johnson, a Vero Beach pharmacist, told jurors a man once came in a week after getting an OxyContin prescription claiming he lost all the pills while cleaning Luyao's pool. Though the story seemed suspicious to Johnson, Luyao confirmed it and ordered more medication. "After a while it just got to be so bad that we tried not to fill her prescriptions," Johnson said. An investigator with the state Medicaid fraud office testified there were Medicaid patients coming from as far away as the Panhandle and Miami-Dade County to see Luyao for prescriptions -- one of several things that concerned his office. OxyContin prescriptions filled by Luyao's Medicaid patients rose steadily from 17 prescriptions in 1997 to 844 in 2001. While the office billed about $3,000 in medical care to Medicaid in a five-year span, the program was billed $1.6 million in prescriptions, with about $1 million made up of OxyContin pills. Luyao was one of the top 10 OxyContin prescribers in the state for several years, according to Lt. David Brockmeier, with the Medicaid fraud office. After the prosecution rested around 4 p.m., defense attorney Joel Hirschhorn asked Senior Judge C. P. Trowbridge to acquit Luyao on all charges, claiming there was not enough evidence to support them. Trowbridge denied the routine motion, but said some of the counts against her did appear weak. The defense, which will begin presenting its case today, has argued many of Luyao's patients lied to her in order to get prescriptions, and that she broke no laws in treating them. Other factors, and not Luyao's care, led to the patient deaths. The trial began May 9; about 50 witnesses have testified for the prosecution over nine days. Trowbridge told jurors he expects they will be able to begin deliberations by the end of the week. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek