Pubdate: Wed, 13 Feb 2008 Source: Times-Tribune, The (Scranton PA) Contact: 2008 Townnews.com Website: http://www.thetimes-tribune.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4440 Author: Daniel Axelrod TREATMENT STILL FACING HURDLES IN REGULATION Five years after the release of a much-heralded drug that blocks opiate addicts' cravings, state officials are grappling with how to regulate the treatment. Federal officials spent years helping to develop and promote buprenorphine and encouraged doctors to dispense it. The hexagonal orange pill -- marketed as Suboxone -- is manufactured by the pharmaceuticals subsidiary of the British company Reckitt Benckiser. Providers say state regulations make it difficult for inpatient and outpatient facilities to prescribe the medicine and receive reimbursement. However, some obstacles to dispensing Suboxone could soon fall. In late December, state Secretary of Health Calvin Johnson, M.D., approved recommendations by the Buprenorphine Workgroup, a collection of addiction experts who studied barriers to the treatment. State officials said they hope to enact within a year the recommendations, which include easing state regulations so operators of outpatient clinics can more easily prescribe Suboxone. Currently, clinic operators who wish to prescribe the drug must apply for a Modified Narcotic Treatment Facility license from the state. These would-be Suboxone providers argue that the application process is lengthy, cumbersome and expensive. Meanwhile, primary care doctors can easily prescribe Suboxone from their offices by taking an eight-hour course to get a license from the federal Drug Enforcement Agency. Clinic operators say the "double standard" makes no sense because they are addiction specialists capable of caring for substance abusers with expertise, counseling and other treatment resources family doctors can't provide. Eric Flaherty, Ph.D., is executive director of the Institute for Research, Education and Training in Addictions in Pittsburgh and served with the Buprenorphine Workgroup. He said he is puzzled why it is easy for clinic doctors to prescribe potentially dangerous drugs such as Oxycontin and Vicodin, yet difficult for them to dole out Suboxone. "I know the intent of the state regulations was to be cautious and safe, and to do this for patient safety," Dr. Flaherty said. "But it ended up adding more barriers than were necessary." State officials counter that Suboxone was specifically designed for doctors to quickly and easily prescribe it from their offices. Plus, state officials say the state is addressing Suboxone access issues at outpatient clinics by reviewing the workgroup's recommendations. Regulators will create a system to issue waivers to expedite the process for outpatient clinics to prescribe Suboxone, according to a copy of the letter Dr. Johnson sent to workgroup members. State officials are carefully and gradually reforming the system so, for now, inpatient clinics still will have to go through the state's standard application process to prescribe Suboxone, said state Department of Health spokeswoman Stacy Kriedeman. The state health secretary also wants to ensure that managed care organizations that administer prescription medication benefits don't try to steer patients to methadone first, instead of Suboxone. Methadone treatment is cheaper, but usually not appropriate for Suboxone candidates, providers said. Suboxone works better with addicts who used opiates for two years or less, while methadone is preferred for long-term users. Meanwhile, patients complain there aren't enough primary care doctors taking the course required to dispense the medicine. Scranton physician Paul Remick, D.O., with the Horizon Medical Group, prescribes Suboxone and has decades of experience treating substance abusers. He agreed that there is a shortage of local addiction specialists. Opiate addicts "are very difficult patients," Dr. Remick said. "They're highly manipulative. They lie, they cheat, they steal. .They also may present an unkempt appearance in the office." "But the people in my Suboxone program look normal to you or me," Dr. Remick added. "Most of them aren't unkempt -- they are in recovery." Among Northeastern Pennsylvania counties, Lackawanna and Luzerne each have nine doctors qualified to prescribe Suboxone, according to Reckitt Benckiser's Web site, Suboxone.com. Pike and Monroe counties have one and three doctors, respectively, though not all doctors put their names on the Web site's list. Also, the federal government limits the number of Suboxone patients a doctor may treat. Federal laws allow each doctor to see 30 Suboxone patients during the physician's first year of certification to prescribe the drug. Doctors can see up to 100 patients annually thereafter, but most doctors set caps for Medical Assistance patients and addicts. "Doctors don't want to be on the (Suboxone.com) list, because of the stigma -- they don't want to be known for treating opiate addicts," said Dona Dmitrovic, buprenorphine project coordinator for the Recovery Advocacy Service and Empowerment organization, a Harrisburg-based nonprofit that champions the drug. "But I've had doctors tell me having people that are addicted to heroin come in and be able to get better and think clearly and recover is one of the most rewarding things they've ever done," Ms. Dmitrovic said. The state health secretary, Dr. Johnson, has vowed to promote more courses to certify doctors to prescribe the drug. Clinic operators said more doctors prescribing Suboxone won't help substance abusers break their addictions, because counseling and other services are vital to recovery, too. A study in the Journal of Addiction Medicine, however, found that doctors are recommending Suboxone users get counseling only 40 percent of the time, Dr. Flaherty said. Federal regulations are vague about whether doctors must make patients go to counseling before receiving Suboxone. The law states that doctors must be capable of recognizing when Suboxone recipients need counseling, and physicians must have the ability to refer patients to the service. It doesn't say doctors must refer patients to counseling when they prescribe the drug. Meanwhile, some providers still doubt Suboxone's efficacy. "I don't care what the elixir is, the vast majority of these people will fail," said Kevin McLaughlin, executive director of the nonprofit counseling center Drug and Alcohol Treatment Service Inc. in Scranton. Mr. McLaughlin said trendy new addiction treatments are always popping up, with varying results. In most cases, he thinks, substance abusers are better off not taking prescriptions to try to kick addictions to illegal drugs. He has not decided whether he thinks Suboxone is effective, though so far he has been disappointed with his clients' results using the drug. "There are people who supported buprenorphine in the beginning, and now they frown upon it," Mr. McLaughlin said. "I think part of the reason is that there are doctors out there that prescribe Suboxone and don't mandate counseling, too." However, Mr. McLaughlin does refer DATS clients who ask for Suboxone to Dr. Remick. Dr. Remick said he has only prescribed the drug for a few years and needs more time to gauge its effectiveness. He thinks it has shown great promise with some of his patients, but it is not a panacea for addiction. The notion Suboxone is not a silver bullet is among the few points addiction experts agree on. Like methadone, Suboxone must be prescribed carefully, because it carries its own risk of abuse, treatment providers said. An illegal street trade has already emerged as addicts crush pills, remove their chemical safeguards and use them to get high. Experts also say addicts need to be carefully monitored while on Suboxone. Along with counseling, they should have access to social services and classes for anger management, communication and vocational skills. "Let's say you get a guy out of jail or the hospital," said Stanton Peele, Ph.D., a widely published addiction psychologist. "If he's going back to a totally drug-infested environment, and he doesn't have stable housing or job skills, you're just going to get to the same end point as before." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek