Pubdate: Fri, 10 Jun 2005 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Copyright: 2005 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487 Author: Heather Won Tesoriero, Staff Reporter Section: B1 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) DRUG MAKERS MOVE TO HALT NEW CONTROLS ON COLD MEDICINES Cold Medications Have Become A Headache For The Drug Industry. Drug makers lost the battle with states that wanted to move "behind the counter" all cold medications containing pseudoephedrine, which can be used to make the illegal stimulant methamphetamine. Now, in a different tactic, the drug industry is supporting states' efforts to prevent minors from buying cold remedies that contain another drug that sometimes is abused, dextromethorphan, but to allow the medicines to remain in the store aisles. Dextromethorphan, familiarly called DXM, is an ingredient in dozens of over-the-counter medications, including Wyeth's Robitussin, Johnson & Johnson's Tylenol Cold & Flu and Schering-Plough Corp.'s Coricidin HBP. Some teens have been consuming large quantities of DXM products to get high and hallucinate - -- often called "robotripping" (derived from Robitussin) or "skittling." While the practice isn't new, it has gained attention in the past year from a growing number of reports of teens overdosing. Last month, the Food and Drug Administration issued a warning about DXM abuse. It said the warning was prompted by "5 recently reported deaths of teenagers that may be associated with the consumption of powdered DXM sold in capsules." An FDA spokesman said the agency is investigating the illegal sale of the powdered form of DXM; the spokesman wouldn't provide more details. Last year, DXM products brought in $858.8 million in sales, according to market-data researcher ACNielsen, and the drug industry doesn't want to see that chunk of business move behind the counter with PSE. The industry "suffered through these PSE issues for so many years," says Mary Ann Wagner, vice president of pharmacy regulatory affairs for the National Association of Chain Drug Stores. "When they saw DXM, they said, 'Never again' and are trying to get in front of it." Toward that end, the Consumer Healthcare Products Association, which represents makers of over-the-counter drugs, is taking action. The trade group supports DXM bills pending in six states -- California, New York, Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island -- most of which seek to prohibit the sale of DXM products to minors, while keeping the products on store shelves. Unlike methamphetamine, which can be made from PSE, DXM itself isn't illegal. The trade group is also in discussions with members of Congress about sponsoring federal legislation that would criminalize bulk sales of DXM sold in bulk to non-FDA-registered entities. The Internet has become a popular way for teens to buy the drug remedies that contain DXM and learn about the effects of the drug. Chris Fisher, a 19-year-old from Hillsborough, N.J., says he discovered DXM and "robotripping" a few years ago while he was searching the Internet for a drug he could "get easily." Mr. Fisher says his weekend habit escalated to daily use, and that he would buy - -- or steal -- the drug medicine from grocery stores and pharmacies. "I was doing cough syrup every day and getting into trouble," he says. For the past six months, Mr. Fisher has been in a residential treatment program run by Daytop, a substance-abuse treatment organization with services in four states. The Consumer Healthcare Products trade association is also funding a public-education campaign with the Partnership for a Drug-Free America, a nonprofit drug-education group. In the group's recent annual study, 9% of teens -- a total of 2.2 million -- reported using cough medications to get high. This was the first time the organization included cough medicine in its poll, and it did so in part because the industry expressed its concerns about the potential for abuse, says Tom Hedrick, a director and a founding member of the drug-education group. In 2003 and 2004, the trade association's donations to the drug-education partnership were nearly half a million dollars. This year, it says it will donate $1 million -- placing it in the top 20% of the group's donors -- and all that money is earmarked for prevention of abuse of cough and cold medications. Among the tactics of the two groups, they have paid to drive keywords on Internet searches to a Web site that features actual teens telling cautionary tales about DXM abuse. Though the site http://www.dxmstories.com was funded by the trade group and developed by the drug-education partnership, the names of the organizations aren't featured on the home page but discreetly placed on the site's other pages. The aim is for teens to find the site on their own and "not have them see it as something concocted by the drug-abuse community," says Virginia Cox, vice president of communications for CHPA. A portion of the Web site aimed at parents and devoted to DXM facts was paid for by the trade association. The two groups also are using print, TV and radio ads to educate parents and teens about the prevalence and dangers of DXM abuse, and it is also collaborating with the American Academy of Pediatrics. Industry efforts to block laws that have put products containing PSE behind the counter crumbled when Pfizer Inc. introduced a reformulated, non-PSE version of its Sudafed. Pfizer split from the industry and backed state laws that effectively moved competing products off the shelves. Drug makers say there is no chemical reformulation option for DXM-based products. But soon there will be an option that could make it more difficult to abuse them. Leiner Health Products, which makes store-brand versions of over-the-counter medications, recently said it would market dissolvable DXM strips. Crystal Wright, a Leiner spokeswoman, says teens seeking to take mass quantities of DXM "will have a very tough time of it with the strips," which will be sold in individual-dosage pouches. Some retailers aren't waiting for laws to catch up to them. CVS Corp.'s pharmacies won't sell Schering-Plough's Coricidin or the store-brand equivalent to minors. At Walgreen Co. stores, a spokeswoman says, cash registers block a one-time purchase of more than three packages of Coricidin HBP, in which DXM is the sole ingredient. Some Walgreen stores, the spokeswoman says, have voluntarily placed Coricidin HBP behind the counter. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin