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OxyContin Billionaire Richard Sackler Patents New Drug to Get You Off OxyContin

Jabberwocky

Frumious Bandersnatch
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A billionaire pharmaceuticals executive who has been blamed for spurring the US opioid crisis stands to profit from the epidemic after he patented a new treatment for drug addicts.

Richard Sackler, whose family owns Purdue Pharma, the company behind the notorious painkiller OxyContin, was granted a patent earlier this year for a reformulation of a drug used to wean addicts off opioids.

The invention is a novel form of buprenorphine, a mild opiate that controls drug cravings, which is often given as a substitute to people hooked on heroin or opioid painkillers such as OxyContin.

The new formulation as described in Dr Sackler?s patent could end up proving lucrative thanks to a steady increase in the number of addicts being treated with buprenorphine, which is seen as a better alternative to other opioid substitutes such as methadone.

Last year, the leading version of buprenorphine, which is sold under the brand name Suboxone, generated $877m in US sales for Indivior, the British pharmaceuticals group that makes it.

Before the opioid crisis, the Sackler family was primarily known for its philanthropy, emerging as one of the largest donors to arts institutions in the US and UK. But the rising number of addictions and deaths has highlighted the family?s ownership of Purdue, which some members have tried to shy away from.

It?s reprehensible what Purdue Pharma has done to our public health

Luke Nasta, director of Camelot
Dr Sackler?s patent, which was granted by the US Patent and Trademark Office in January, acknowledges the threat posed by the opioid crisis, which claimed more than 42,000 lives in 2016.

?While opioids have always been known to be useful in pain treatment, they also display an addictive potential,? the patent states. ?Thus, if opioids are taken by healthy human subjects with a drug-seeking behaviour they may lead to psychological as well as physical dependence.?

It adds: ?The constant pressures upon addicts to procure money for buying drugs and the concomitant criminal activities have been increasingly recognised as a major factor that counteracts efficient and long-lasting withdrawal and abstinence from drugs.?

However, the patent makes no mention of the fact that Purdue Pharma has been hit with more than a thousand lawsuits for allegedly fuelling the epidemic ? allegations the company and the Sackler family deny.

?It?s reprehensible what Purdue Pharma has done to our public health,? said Luke Nasta, director of Camelot, an addiction treatment centre in Staten Island, New York. He said the Sackler family ?shouldn?t be allowed to peddle any more synthetic opiates ? and that includes opioid substitutes?.

Buprenorphine is prescribed to opioid addicts in tablets or thin film strips that dissolve under the tongue in less than seven minutes. These ?sublingual? formulations are used to stop drug abusers from hoarding a stockpile of pills they can sell or use to get high at a later date.

The patent describes a new, improved form of buprenorphine that would come in a wafer that disintegrated more quickly than existing versions ? perhaps in just a few seconds.

The original application was made by Purdue Pharma and Dr Sackler is listed as one of the inventors alongside five others, some of whom work or have worked for the Sackler?s group of drug companies.

?Drug addicts sometimes still try to divert these sublingual buprenorphine tablets by removing them from the mouth,? the patent application stated. ?There remains a need for other . . . abuse-resistant dosage forms.?

In June, the Massachusetts attorney-general filed a lawsuit against Dr Sackler and seven other members of the Sackler family, which accused them of engaging in a ?deadly, deceptive scheme to sell opioids?.

Purdue and the family deny the allegations and Purdue said it intends to file a motion to dismiss. The company points out that OxyContin was, and still is, approved by the US Food and Drug Administration.

?We believe it is inappropriate for [Massachusetts] to substitute its judgment for the judgment of the regulatory, scientific and medical experts at FDA,? it said in a recent statement to the Financial Times.

Andrew Kolodny, a professor from Brandeis University who has been a vocal advocate for greater use of buprenorphine to battle the opioid crisis, said the idea Dr Sackler ?could get richer? from the patent was ?very disturbing?. He added: ?Perhaps the profits off this patent should be used to pay any judgment or settlement down the line.?

Earlier this week, Purdue donated $3.4m to boost access to naloxone, an antidote given to people who have just overdosed on opioids.



Source: https://www.ft.com/content/a3a53ae8-b1e3-11e8-8d14-6f049d06439c
 
Purdue never put guns to the heads of physicians to force them to prescribe OxyContin, nor did they put guns to the heads of those in the FDA who chose to approve the drug and have allowed it to stay approved until this day. They did market the heck out of OxyContin, as any drugmaker would have, but this narrative that doctors and government agencies are helpless actors in the marketing games of Big Pharma puppet masters really lets those groups off the hook. If we accept that doctors and the FDA have acted in such a manner to a significant extent, then that seems to me to be a much more significant issue than the actions of Purdue.

Maybe instead of focusing on trying to sue Purdue, governments should focus on mandating that doctors get more extensive training in (a) pain management and (b) making prescription choices based on published science and value-for-money instead of going for whatever shiny new pill the salesmen are peddling.
 
^ true, but purdue did market oxycontin knowingly as a drug that is less addictive.
Personally i'd blame the aggressive and misleading marketing to prescribers more than i would the doctors themselves.
I think it's a bit unnecessary to need to find someone to blame for the situation (prohibition is the real reason for addiction ruining people's lives and killing so many) - but i think the way oxycodone was pushed as a less addictive, less "abusable" pain med is pretty deceptive.

I find it odd that they call buprenorphine a "mild opiate that controls cravings".
Sure - it's not a full agonist, but "mild" is a strange descriptor, given the potency of bupe.
 
This problem was a ticking time bomb anyway. If Purdue didn't do it then someone else would have, it's not like purdue caused oxycodone to be addictive. If the government allows you to widely distribute something that's very addictive it's going to sell very well.

Didn't the US have the same problem with unregulated opium and opium dens about 100-or so- years ago?
 
Nice a form of easily dissolvable bupe. Wonder what other benefits will come to people from this. Well this drug dealing family did not make billions by being stupid. Let us not forget that the all knowing FDA is funded by those it regulates.
 
Didn't the US have the same problem with unregulated opium and opium dens about 100-or so- years ago?

Not really. The hysteria surrounding opium dens was more about anti-Chinese xenophobia and political power dynamics of the early 20th century. It has relatively little to do with public health beyond the racist politics of the day.
 
^Basically every relatively old drug was rendered illegal for racist reasons, so no surprises here.

That said, while the British were pushing it, I recall (anecdotal, burned out so can source later) that in China ~90% of the male population was addicted to opium.
 
People can still stockpile the new SL forms of bupe. The only less abusable version would be an implant or patch. It is hard for me to picture a single doctor who went through all those years of training and still fails to realize some new pain med synthesized from thebaine is going to be addictive.
 
WTF? the old mini M&M sized bupes (MFG by Akorn) dissolved in seconds...more dis/misinfo to make their Scrooge McDuck hoards of wealth deeper & wider while we die on sidewalks not from H, but H+Fent (found to have a synergistic amplification of respiratory suppression & doesn't respond to multiple doses of narcan). Fantastic news...for noone. Clean, pure heroin legal & well managed is unquestionably the safest, cheapest, real world proven method to ease the problems inherent in cheap street "dope". Purdue already makes bank off their traditional buprenorphine tabs, but remove most of the crap fillers while the molecule remains identical in every way & boom..patent approved. It's not tough to poke holes in spongiferous gelatin points/arguements. Purdue's just a pusher with an actual license to kill. Hope the stamp is 007
 
Pursue/ Sacklers deserve all the stick they get. None of the Sacklers should still be walking around with billions in their pocket.
Looking at the damage oxycontin has caused.
It was created as the perfect opiate.
Snort it, iv it, chase it, chew it. And in 160ml doses.
Authorities equally to blame.
 
Pursue/ Sacklers deserve all the stick they get. None of the Sacklers should still be walking around with billions in their pocket.
Looking at the damage oxycontin has caused.
It was created as the perfect opiate.
Snort it, iv it, chase it, chew it. And in 160ml doses.
Authorities equally to blame.
agreed

their immunity deal is fucking bullshit, I really hope the courts strike it down

THEY DO NOT DESERVE IMMUNITY!!!

they deserve a real jail sentence and most of their money taken away, or else we have a new American family wealth legacy that was built on suffering and death, just like old slave owners
 
Crazy I was just having a talk with someone about these sacks of crap
 
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