Pubdate: Sun, 01 May 2016 Source: New Haven Register (CT) Copyright: 2016 New Haven Register Contact: http://www.nhregister.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/292 Author: Esteban L. Hernandez EXAMINING OPIOID ADDICTION TREATMENT Dr. Leana Wen, a practicing emergency care physician and Baltimore's health commissioner, has seen what addiction does to patients. Speaking to reporters this month in Baltimore, Wen recalled a patient, who developed an addiction and would lie about illnesses to ensure she had access to treatment, but then died of a heroin overdose after multiple attempts to get appropriate treatment. "Our overall goal: We have to get people into treatment at the time that the need it," Wen said. But the rate of fatal opioid overdoses has skyrocketed in the United States. Opioid-involved deaths more than tripled from 2000 to 2014, including an age-adjusted death rate increase of 210 percent from the same time span, according to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In 2014 alone, 28,000 people died of fatal opioid overdoses, according to the CDC. Yet the medical community continues grappling with just how to offer treatment and care for the estimated 2 million people addicted to opioids, according to the National Survey of Drug Use and Health. There's at least 7.9 million Americans 12 and older who meet the criteria for an illicit drug use disorder, according to federal the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Service Administration. Connecticut hasn't fared well in its fight to stop the spread of opioids, a drug class that includes illicit substances such as heroin and legal ones like oxycodone and morphine. The state's fatal death rate has mirrored the national trend, steadily increasing in the past five years: Connecticut has seen an increase of fatal overdoses involving opioids every year since 2012, when 195 people died from opioid substance use. Last year 444 people died of the same substance use, according to figures from the Chief Medical Examiner's Office. Overall, 723 people died of drug overdoses in 2015, up from 357 in 2012. The state is taking more steps to stem the spread of opioid addiction and, by extension, perhaps curb the number of fatal overdoses, which have overtaken motor vehicle accidents as the leading cause of accidental deaths in Connecticut. The state's General Assembly passed laws expanding the availability of naloxone and provisions that spare first responders from liability and the House last week passed a bill that would limit the number of narcotics prescribed to patients. The bill places a 7-day cap on opioid prescriptions in an effort to rein in what many called the "over-prescribing" of painkillers by doctors, ctnewsjunkie.com reported. There is an exception clause included in the bill for those receiving long-term prescriptions from their doctors allowing them to exceed the 7-day cap. Further, the U.S. Attorney's Office announced this month the launching of a coordinated, statewide initiative to provide a protocol for all municipal police departments to investigate fatal overdoses as crime scenes to help find the source of the drug. The state Department of Correction plans to expand methadone treatment for prisoners. Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., released a 27-page set of recommendations, "Opioid Addiction: A Call for Action," April 15 that offers suggestions on how states can address increases in substance use disorders related to opioids. The scope and magnitude of the issue has reached the White House, as President Obama joined people in recovery and medical professionals during the National Rx Drug Abuse and Heroin Summit in March. Coincidently, he was joined by Wen during the discussion. Dr. Gail D'Onofrio, professor and chairwoman of emergency medicine at the Yale School of Medicine was there, too. Obama's drug policy chief, White House's Director of National Drug Control Policy Michael Botticelli, also spoke to journalists in Baltimore. Botticelli said the opioid epidemic came to the attention of medical professionals "in a dramatically different way." "This was not a cartel from Mexico kind of pushing drugs in our community, this was basically, an epidemic generated by the over-prescribing of prescription medication within our medical community," Botticelli said. According to the CDC, 249 million prescriptions were written in 2013 in this country. The number of opioid prescription dispensed quadrupled since 1999, despite no change in the amount of pain Americans reported. Nearly 65 percent of people who use prescription painkillers acquire the drugs through friends or family, Botticelli said. The proliferation of legal painkillers has a domino effect; the National Survey on Drug Use and Health found people addicted to prescription opioids were 40 times more likely to be addicted to heroin. Those who used cocaine were 15 times more likely to be addicted to heroin, while marijuana users were three times more likely. But to prevent more fatal overdoses, it starts with addressing the disease - as soon as a doctor notices it. Treatment options for opioid addiction During the American Society of Addiction Medicine conference at which Wen spoke, the message repeated regarding treatment for opioid addiction was clear: There is no silver bullet for treating addiction. Most of the doctors and researchers who spoke specifically discussing opioid use disorders suggested an approach similar to the one Wen described as the most beneficial form of treatment. Wen ascribes to American Society of Addiction Medicine's definition of addiction as a chronic disease of the brain, not necessarily a definition accepted by everyone. "Treating addiction as a crime is inhumane, it's unscientific and it's ineffective," Wen said. "We know what works ... medication, counseling and wrap-around services." Among initiatives in Baltimore spearheaded by Wen were creating "wrap-around" services that include informing patients of possible treatment when they're brought to the ER. It includes issuing a standing order for the city's 600,000-plus residents to have a prescription for naloxone, the anti-overdose drug, and creating a 24/7 hotline operated by social workers and counselors familiar with mental health and addiction. They also created a public health campaign to teach people how to prevent overdoses and a mobile needle exchange program. Could such a model work for some of the largest cities in Connecticut? In New Haven, the medical community is already on high-alert and has been developing treatment programs for several years. "We are trying really hard to integrate our services," said D'Onofrio This means providing a combination of medically-assisted treatment such as methadone and buprenorphine but supplementing this treatment with therapy, inpatient or outpatient care. Methadone and buprenorphine are among three FDA-approved medications used for treating opioid use disorders, the third one being naloxone, according to Allan Coukell, senior director for health programs at The Pew Charitable Trusts. Dr. Patrick O'Connor, a professor of medicine and chief, general internal medicine at Yale School of Medicine, estimated there's probably about 350,000 people in this country undergoing methadone treatment and 600,000 medicating with buprenorphine. It's a fraction of the people in need of treatment. "There should be more," O'Connor said. "We have these highly addictive treatment options for opioid dependency that work very well and we need to get these scientifically proven, effective treatment to patients." D'Onofrio said Yale's medical school has been heavily involved in bringing addiction medication to the forefront, including developing a practice using buprenorphine. "Addiction is like driving your car, and you see a kid in front of your car and you want to stop, but the brakes don't work," D'Onofrio said, repeating what she said is one of the best analogies she's heard to describe the disease. Like Wen, D'Onofrio is an emergency care physician who has firsthand experience treating people with addiction in life-threatening situations. This background allowed D'Onofrio to contribute to a 2015 Yale study for initiating buprenorphine treatment after an initial emergency care visit. "We've done some very innovative work," D'Onofrio said. "What we found is that the people who received the buprenorphine were two times as likely to be engaged in a treatment at 30 days (after initial visit). They were less likely to use illicit opioids during that time." The study is helping develop a protocol for YaleNew Haven Hospital. It includes discharging patients with opioid use disorders with a 72-hour supply of buprenorphine and naloxone. D'Onofrio said the hospital has trained 15 emergency care doctors who can prescribe buprenorphine. "What we are doing is trying to change this paradigm that when you have a chronic disease that is life-threatening, why aren't we initiating treatment in the emergency department right away and setting up an appropriate referral the same way if you came in with severe highblood pressure?" D'Onofrio said. Discharging patients after they overdose without further treatment options means "What we are saying to someone is, 'See you later, go about your life, maybe you'll live,'" D'Onofrio said. "We shouldn't be doing that. We should be trying to get them into treatment." A patient must fit criteria before they're discharged with the buprenorphine supply. It's difficult to overdose on buprenorphine and it's generally considered safer than methadone. Even as the medical community develops treatment options and lawmakers seek to limit prescription for opioids, access to treatment for addiction disorders itself remains limited. The statistical percentage of its availability is something Wen said still shocks her. "Eleven percent of patients with addiction nationwide are able to get the treatment that they need," Wen said, noting a figure based on an ASAM study. "We would not find that acceptable for any other illness." Children are also capable of developing addiction. A child and adolescent psychiatrist, Dr. Brian Keyes is the director of the Children's Center of Hamden, which provides inpatient and outpatient treatment programs for children with substance use disorders. Keyes also works at the University Of Connecticut School of Medicine and Yale Child Study Center. Most of the youth here begin their addiction at alarmingly young ages: Some are as young as 6, and begin by experimenting with cannabis or drinking as well using other substances. They typically don't begin by using opioids. Most commonly, the children have family members who've also experienced substance use disorders. " "This is a life-threatening disorder," Keyes said about addiction. "People see it happening to every racial, socialeconomic area ... it makes it more real that this happens to everyone." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom