NativeAddiction
Greenlighter
- Joined
- Dec 31, 2011
- Messages
- 36
My doctor just switched me from 20mg Opana ER 2x day to duragesic 50mcg patch every 3 days. I have been taking the oxymorphone hydrochloride 5 mg (generic for Opana IR) PRN -t.i.d. Now that I have switched to the fentanyl patch the Opana IR is no longer effective, most likely due to fentanyl being much stronger. I want to ask my Dr. to switch me to the Actiq (fentanyl citrate) oral transmucosal lozenge (fentanyl lollipop) in lieu of the Opana IR since it is no longer working.
I have been reading about Actiq and in March the FDA put in place a new access program called TIRF REMS that all doctors prescribing buccal/transmucosal fentanyl must be enrolled in, as well as doctors enrolling each individual patient (which really just requires them to inform patients of risk, read medication leaflet and sign a form). I am just wondering if most doctors who prescribe Sched. II narcotics are enrolled in this program or if many are not prescribing this med because of the hassle of the program. I know there is all kinds of lawsuits and crap going on against Cephalon because of drug reps being told to market Actiq to Drs for Off-label uses.
Although 90% of Actiq prescriptions are written for off-label uses and the only FDA approved use is for cancer pain, I wonder if my Dr will RX this or even is enrolled in the risk mitigation access program. If he is not and doesn't prescribe Actiq, what the heck should I try to switch to that is immediate release for breakthrough pain that is going to be comparable to a fentanyl short acting? I don't know of anything that will be stronger than Opana IR that ISN'T fentanyl and worry now that I am going to have a problem controlling breakthrough pain, as the Opana IR worked moderately well for breakthrough while I was on the Opana ER (mainly because the ER didn't control my pain at all)
I have been on pretty much every other IR med and found Opana to work the best up until now. Does anyone have any experience with Drs RXing Actiq off label to them or know of an IR med better than Opana and comparable in strength to fentanyl? The hard part I have already figured out, my insurance will cover the Actiq with a pretty low co-pay, now I just have to find out if my Dr is enrolled in the TIRF REMS access program and will RX the Actiq. My Dr is really good and knows my pain level, I am on a narcotic contract and get urine screened every visit so he knows I adhere to prescribing guidelines with my meds. Any help or suggestions greatly appreciated!
I have been reading about Actiq and in March the FDA put in place a new access program called TIRF REMS that all doctors prescribing buccal/transmucosal fentanyl must be enrolled in, as well as doctors enrolling each individual patient (which really just requires them to inform patients of risk, read medication leaflet and sign a form). I am just wondering if most doctors who prescribe Sched. II narcotics are enrolled in this program or if many are not prescribing this med because of the hassle of the program. I know there is all kinds of lawsuits and crap going on against Cephalon because of drug reps being told to market Actiq to Drs for Off-label uses.
Although 90% of Actiq prescriptions are written for off-label uses and the only FDA approved use is for cancer pain, I wonder if my Dr will RX this or even is enrolled in the risk mitigation access program. If he is not and doesn't prescribe Actiq, what the heck should I try to switch to that is immediate release for breakthrough pain that is going to be comparable to a fentanyl short acting? I don't know of anything that will be stronger than Opana IR that ISN'T fentanyl and worry now that I am going to have a problem controlling breakthrough pain, as the Opana IR worked moderately well for breakthrough while I was on the Opana ER (mainly because the ER didn't control my pain at all)
I have been on pretty much every other IR med and found Opana to work the best up until now. Does anyone have any experience with Drs RXing Actiq off label to them or know of an IR med better than Opana and comparable in strength to fentanyl? The hard part I have already figured out, my insurance will cover the Actiq with a pretty low co-pay, now I just have to find out if my Dr is enrolled in the TIRF REMS access program and will RX the Actiq. My Dr is really good and knows my pain level, I am on a narcotic contract and get urine screened every visit so he knows I adhere to prescribing guidelines with my meds. Any help or suggestions greatly appreciated!
