'Bupe' to draw closer scrutiny [updated 1.17.08]

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'Bupe' to draw closer scrutiny
Fred Schulte and Doug Donovan
Baltimore Sun
1.11.08



U.S. to start tracking deaths of those on addiction treatment
The addiction treatment drug buprenorphine will come under closer scrutiny through a new federal initiative to track the deaths of opiate addicts taking it or methadone.

U.S. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration officials hope the new tracking system will significantly improve the safety and quality of drug treatment for more than 400,000 addicts across the country, including thousands in Baltimore.

A series of articles published in The Sun in December showed that while buprenorphine can be a highly effective addiction medicine, misuse of the drug is on the rise. Some people have died when taking buprenorphine with other drugs. But the number of deaths is unknown, because medical examiners in Maryland and most other states don't test for buprenorphine in overdose deaths.

Federal officials disclosed the data collection effort in a Jan. 2 notice in the Federal Register. Drug treatment programs will be asked to voluntarily report information about deaths.

The system will help policymakers identify "preventable causes of deaths, and ultimately take appropriate action to minimize risk and help improve the quality of care," according to the notice.

"We're doing this to get a better handle on any trends," Nick Reuter, a senior public health analyst with SAMHSA, said yesterday. "There's no central repository for that information."

Health officials stress that both methadone and buprenorphine are safe when taken properly and help ease cravings addicts feel for opiates. Using illegal drugs such as heroin or cocaine poses far greater dangers of death or injury, they say.

Methadone has been the nation's mainstay addiction therapy since the 1970s. It is dispensed by about 1,100 clinics to roughly 250,000 people nationwide. To stem abuses, methadone clinics initially require addicts to appear daily for their doses. About 60 percent of the methadone clinics also use buprenorphine for some patients, according to Reuter.

While reliable national figures are difficult to obtain, some states have tied an alarming overdose death toll to methadone. Medical examiners in Florida, for instance, reported that the drug caused 312 deaths in the first six months of 2006 alone, more than any other drug.

Many drug treatment experts believe the vast majority of patients who have died from methadone overdoses were taking the drug for pain and often took it with other drugs.

"We don't anticipate there are many deaths [in methadone clinic patients]," said Mark W. Parrino, president of the American Association for the Treatment of Opioid Dependence. "We're very happy to cooperate."

How much information the government will be able to garner about buprenorphine is less clear.

Buprenorphine, sold mainly under the brand name Suboxone, has been on the market since late 2002. It is prescribed to about 170,000 people, either through clinics or several thousand specially licensed doctors, who would not be part of the reporting system.

Federal officials consider buprenorphine much safer than methadone and are encouraging more private physicians to begin using it to treat addicts. Though it also can suppress breathing if abused, Suboxone has a ceiling effect that limits the danger of overdose as more is consumed. But that effect diminishes when the drug is taken with tranquilizers and other drugs.

Buprenorphine enjoys wide political support. That's especially true in Baltimore. Earlier this week, Mayor Sheila Dixon requested $5 million from the Maryland General Assembly to greatly expand buprenorphine treatment.

Yet Maryland authorities have paid little attention to the drug's emergence as a street commodity.

Some patients illegally sell the orange, hexagonal tablets after receiving them to take at home. Some abusers use the pills to get high or to tide them over when they can't find heroin or other opiates.

Deaths from mixing the pills with other drugs also are likely to escape scrutiny in most states, including Maryland, where medical examiners lack the lab equipment to detect the drug.

The Sun series reported that the drug's manufacturer knew of 13 deaths since the start of 2005 from taking buprenorphine in combination with other drugs. The newspaper uncovered two such deaths the company didn't know about. They occurred in Vermont, the state with the nation's highest rate of buprenorphine use.

Reuter, the SAMHSA official, conceded that the new surveillance system is not likely to capture much information from private doctors, who are not involved in the reporting system but are prescribing most of the buprenorphine used to treat addicts.

A few medical examiners around the country are considering adding tests for buprenorphine as overdose deaths related to abuse of the drug begin to surface.

Dr. Steven Shapiro, Vermont's medical examiner, began this month to test for buprenorphine in every suspected overdose death.

"We're the number one per capita prescriber of this drug and we have no clue how much is out there," he said.

Dr. Margaret Greenwald, Maine's chief medical examiner, wants to routinely test for buprenorphine. But she said the $200 cost per buprenorphine screen is prohibitive.

She said two men have died over the past two years of overdoses caused by mixing illegally obtained buprenorphine with other substances. One man, Donald Morin, died on Feb. 16, 2006, after mixing buprenorphine with the tranquilizer Xanax and cocaine. Suboxone pills were found in his pocket, which led to the test, she said. Another man died July 21, 2007, of an overdose caused by mixing buprenorphine with alcohol and two antidepressants, she said.

The Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene has asked the commission that oversees the state medical examiner's office to review possible testing for buprenorphine. The state is spending $3 million to roll out the drug statewide, plus nearly $2 million to pay for prescriptions of low-income patients.

Dr. J. Ramsay Farah, president of the Maryland Society of Addiction Medicine, supports testing.

"If you don't look for something you're not going to find it," Farah said. "You need to look for it."

Link!
 
Action vowed on 'bupe'
Doug Donovan and Fred Schulte
Baltimore Sun
1.17.08



Baltimore's health commissioner told the city's top criminal justice leaders yesterday that his agency will do more to minimize street sales of buprenorphine, an addiction treatment drug for which the city and state are spending millions of dollars.

Commissioner Dr. Joshua M. Sharfstein has said that misuse of the drug is not a public health problem, but that he will take specific action to reduce street sales - called diversion - as the city expands buprenorphine treatment.

"It's available on the street," Sharfstein told the Baltimore Criminal Justice Coordinating Council at a presentation at the downtown courthouse. "We know this is happening. We're trying to limit diversion. I'm not happy about it but I don't think it's a public health crisis."

Sharfstein provided a document to the panel that spelled out three steps on how he plans to minimize diversion: meet regularly with police about the buprenorphine and other drugs on the streets; review the manufacturer's quarterly reports monitoring misuse; and examine overdose deaths associated with alcohol and depressants such as sedatives, which can be deadly when mixed with buprenorphine.

Sharfstein has previously said that he also wants Maryland's medical examiner to routinely test for buprenorphine, commonly sold under the name Suboxone, in overdose deaths. In addition, he intends to track test results showing whether patients are taking their buprenorphine.

A three-day series in The Sun last month described how Suboxone prescribed for treatment is being sold by patients on the street, leading to growing abuse of the narcotic. Addicts also are injecting and snorting buprenorphine, according to health officials in several states and research from the drug's manufacturer. Illegal sales and abuse remain far below other abused narcotics but are on the rise, especially in areas of the country where the drug is most heavily prescribed, those sources say.

"It's a very fair question to ask what we're doing to minimize the risk because buprenorphine comes with risks," Sharfstein said. "The benefits strongly outweigh the risks. If we're cavalier about the risks it could undermine support about the benefits."

His comments come a week after Mayor Sheila Dixon asked the General Assembly to allocate $5 million to increase the number of city addicts treated with the narcotic each year from about 650 to 2,500.

The city has spent more than $1 million on its 15-month-old program. The state has spent $5 million to support Baltimore's program, start others elsewhere in Maryland and to cover the Medicaid costs of Suboxone.

The House of Delegates' Health and Government Operations Committee will hold a briefing Jan. 24 on the drug that will feature presentations from Sharfstein and Dr. Peter Luongo, director of the state's Alcohol and Drug Abuse Administration.

Some lawmakers said they want to hear how the state is planning to minimize diversion of the state-financed medication.

"The drug should not have been introduced as a matter of policy without having considered those questions [about misuse]," said Del. Richard B. Weldon Jr., a Republican representing Frederick and Washington counties.

He said the state should provide basic protections when taxpayer money is being spent to deliver the drug to addicts. The existence of street sales of the drug should have led the state Department of Health and Mental Hygiene to require the medical examiner to routinely test for it in overdose deaths, he said.

"To ignore that is irresponsible on the part of the state," he said. "We have performance measurements in other places where there is no potential harm for individuals."

Del. Patrick L. McDonough, a Republican representing Baltimore and Harford counties, agreed.

"Do you need a tragedy or an audit two years later to tell us there is a problem?" McDonough said.

Del. B. Daniel Riley, a Democrat representing Cecil and Harford counties, said the state should systematically track urine tests of patients to make sure they are taking their Suboxone.

If Suboxone is not present, it is highly likely that partients are selling it, said Dr. J. Ramsay Farah, president of the Maryland Society of Addiction Medicine.

Farah said the problem in Maryland might not be as pronounced as other states where the per-capita use is higher, but that those problems will increase as the state expands its supply.

"Right now, everyone is happy because the right people are getting the drug," he said. "As more people get it, you will see more of the wrong people getting it."

The directors of four clinics in Baltimore's buprenorphine initiative told The Sun that many addicts come to them having first tried the pill on the street. Police say Suboxone's presence is becoming more noticeable.

In August, police arrested Darryl Thomas in the 1700 block of Pennsylvania Ave. for possession and distribution of Suboxone. Thomas, 42, of the 2800 block of Joseph Ave., pleaded guilty to the charges in November, according to court records.

In the six-page document he gave officials yesterday, Sharfstein reported that the drug's manufacturer, Reckitt Benckiser Pharmaceuticals Inc., found in its studies that "fewer than 10 percent" of doctors across the country reported knowledge of misuse of the drug to get high.

Yet in the company study published October, its consultants found that half of the doctors they surveyed were aware of an illegal trade in buprenorphine and that their numbers have been climbing. The study concluded that: "It was the patients in treatment for opioid abuse - no doubt selling or trading their own supply of buprenorphine - who were seen as major contributors to the street supply."

Link!
 
shit i wish i could find some bupe on the streets i only know one guy who gets a script for these. would selling them on the streets be such a bad thing for those seeking addiction treatment who cant afford it? god forbid pharm companies lose any money...
 
shit i wish i could find some bupe on the streets i only know one guy who gets a script for these. would selling them on the streets be such a bad thing for those seeking addiction treatment who cant afford it? god forbid pharm companies lose any money...

keep in mind that just at the pharmacy, if ur not using insurance, ur gonna be paying very high prices. This means that street price is god knows how many times that. also, im sure most people buying it and the people selling it wont know too much about the substance and people will take it on top of other opiates, throwing themselves into withdrawal, blah blah blah...
 
great, sounds like all this will start in bmore first.

it was funny, the other day i was making a foliage delivery to lexington market. if you are from bmore you know about this place and how fucking nasty and drug filled it is. you can pretty much find anything in the way of drugs down there.

as i was walking in a side door by this group of older junkie lookin heads, some young lookin white kid walked by sayin "bupes, anyone got bupes?" i lol'd and thought about the 4 i had in my pocket.

they usually go for 10-20 in bmore. it costs me 21.73$ for 14 pills at the local CVS
 
I assume you have insurance or some other way to decrease the price????

I can't imagine getting my 14 for 21 bucks..
 
^yea i have some type of rx plan thru my dads insurance plan. im not supposed to be covered now that im 25, but i guess no one ever bothered to check because they still cover the pills.
 
^medicine cabinet: off topic, you could get charged with insurance fraud if you aren't eligible to be on your dads insurance anymore and keep using it, i had a similar experience, i needed to be in school to be on my parents insurance, long story short i dropped out of school and didn't tell my parents, when they found out we had to tell the insurance company and they threatened to bring up charges, luckily i told them i lied and it wasn't my parents fault, and they just let us pay a settlement for the invalid insurance claims
 
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