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    Insight: Shortage of ADHD drug Adderall seen persisting

    BOSTON (Reuters) - A shortage of Adderall, which is used to treat attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, shows little sign of easing as manufacturers struggle to get enough active ingredient to make the drug and demand climbs.

    Adderall, a stimulant, is a controlled substance, meaning it is addictive and has the potential to be abused. The Drug Enforcement Administration tightly regulates how much of the drug's active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) can be distributed to manufacturers each year.

    The system is designed to prevent the creation of stockpiles that could be diverted for inappropriate use. Adderall and other stimulants are popular with students who may not have ADHD but are seeking to improve their test scores.

    The DEA authorizes a certain amount of the API in Adderall - mixed amphetamine salts - to be released to drugmakers each year based on what the agency considers to be the country's legitimate medical need.

    Increasingly that estimate is coming into conflict with what companies themselves say they need to meet demand for the drug, which is reaching all-time highs. In 2010, more than 18 million prescriptions were written for Adderall, up 13.4 percent from 2009, according to IMS Health, which tracks prescription data.

    Concerns are now rising among patient groups and doctors that the shortages seen in 2011 will continue into this year. Many orders remain unfilled, manufacturers say, and it may take several months before ingredient authorized under the new 2012 quota can be turned into new product.

    "I am very concerned about the future," said Ruth Hughes, chief executive of Children and Adults with Attention Deficit/Hyeractivity Disorder (CHADD). "No one seems to have much inventory to get us through the months ahead."

    ADHD is one of the most common childhood disorders. An average of 9 percent of children between the ages of five and 17 are diagnosed with ADHD per year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    Symptoms include difficulty staying focused, hyperactivity and difficulty controlling behavior. If they are not properly medicated, children with ADHD may act out and be held back in class; adolescents might engage in impulsive, risky behavior; adults are at greater risk of being fired from their jobs.

    "There are real major life impacts for people not having access to medication," Hughes said. "Someone needs to own this problem and take the initiative to fix it."

    RIPPLE EFFECT

    Adderall is made in several dosages and formulations. Shire Plc makes Adderall XR, a more expensive extended release version of the drug. Authorized generic versions of Adderall XR are sold by Teva Pharmaceutical Industries and Impax Laboratories Inc.

    Shorter-acting instant release forms are made by Sandoz, a unit of Swiss drugmaker Novartis AG, as well as by CorePharma LLC and Teva. It is the shorter-acting versions of the drug that are currently in shortest supply.

    The full scope of the shortage is unclear. Patients have been scrambling since mid-year to find pharmacies carrying the drug. Some have been switched to other medications such as Adderall XR or Ritalin, a rival drug known also as methylphenidate. But companies do not always track which pharmacies have their product at any given time.

    "We don't monitor the distribution system, but we do know that all our customers are on back order right now," said Teva spokeswoman Denise Bradley. Teva sells to wholesalers and distributors as well as to some hospitals and specialty pharmacies - and all have orders placed but not filled.

    Hughes said CHADD, along with the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, another advocacy organization, has recently started to track where, geographically, the calls about shortages are coming from.

    Quantifying the problem is particularly urgent since the Adderall shortage is now also spilling over and causing shortages of Ritalin. Sandoz, which makes generic forms of both drugs, is straining to meet increased demand for both products.

    "There is currently not enough product to fill all of our customer orders at the wholesaler level," said Julie Masow, a spokeswoman for Novartis, in an email.

    TENSIONS FLARE

    The problem is particularly troublesome since no one really agrees on its cause.

    Under the quota system, drugmakers receive enough material to meet what the DEA estimates will meet the legitimate needs of American patients, but not enough to build inventory. The DEA says recent shortages were not caused by an insufficient quota but by marketing decisions taken by the companies.

    "Any shortage of these products is therefore a result of decisions made by industry regarding manufacturing or distribution," Barbara Carreno, a DEA spokeswoman said, though she declined to specify those decisions.

    She noted that there are currently more than 200 drugs in short supply in the United States, most of which do not contain controlled substances and have nothing to do with the DEA.

    "There is no reason to think that the same market forces that are causing those shortages are not playing a part in these," Carreno said.

    President Barack Obama recently issued an executive order demanding that the Food & Drug Administration address these shortages, which mostly affect generic injectable drugs that companies are no longer making as they are not as profitable as newer products.

    For their part, Adderall manufacturers say they are working flat out to meet demand, and say the DEA does not always approve enough material in time for them to supply customers.

    "Our production facilities are currently running at maximum capacity for Adderall utilizing all available API," said Teva's Bradley. "The catalyst for the problem is the quota system, not the business."

    The DEA sets its aggregate quota at the beginning of each year, taking into account past quota levels, inventory levels and company sales forecasts. But the DEA's assessment of what a company needs may not be the same as the company's own estimates. It is an ongoing process of negotiation.

    "DEA can come back and say, 'we agree with your forecast and issue everything you want,' or they may come back and say 'we don't think you need that much,' and they give you 75 percent," said Matt Cabrey, a spokesman for Shire.

    Early last year, Shire suffered shortages of Adderall XR. "It was directly related to the API quota," Cabrey said. In June 2010, Shire calculated that API was running too low. It applied to the DEA for more, but did not receive the additional supply until December. It typically takes Shire three months to then make the product and get it to customers.

    As a result, Cabrey said, there were shortages of Adderall XR in January and February last year and supplies did not return to normal until March and April. The company said there are no shortages of Adderall XR, though some patients say even that is now hard to get hold of.

    Amy Alkon, 47, who writes a syndicated column on dating and manners, began taking Adderall for her ADHD about five months ago after Ritalin stopped working for her. This week she spent hours on the phone trying to find a pharmacy that could fill her prescription - and she couldn't find Adderall or Adderall XR.

    "I have gone to the biggest medical centers in the Los Angeles area, I've called countless pharmacies and they have no pills," she said. "Nobody has anything."

    For Alkon, the prospect of the shortage continuing is alarming. Adderall, she said, has changed her life, allowing her to organize her thoughts and tamp down what she calls a "tornado" of activity in her brain.

    CONTROLLED SUBSTANCES

    The DEA, while insisting its quota for 2011 was sufficient, nonetheless revised it upwards in December.

    "We increase the aggregate so that we will have enough to respond to specific companies if their requests for more amphetamine salts are justified and needed," said Carreno. "The companies can and do request more amphetamine salts, and we can and do respond to those requests throughout the year."

    Simply increasing the overall national quota, however, does not address company complaints that it takes DEA months to approve individual requests for new product.

    Asked why it might take the agency months to approve a company's request, the DEA said it is required by law to balance providing enough API to meet the legitimate needs of patients while protecting the public from any diversion of potentially lethal substances.

    "We do our best to accomplish both missions, and the quota system is part of the process for achieving this," Carreno said.

    That is not good enough for CHADD's Hughes or other advocacy groups, who plan to lobby both the DEA and drugmakers to find a solution to the shortages.

    "When you have a controlled substance problem, the DEA has to be involved in fixing it," said Hughes. "It is not sufficient to say it is an industry problem. We need to figure out how to build more flexibility into the system."

    The DEA controls roughly 400 basic substances, in addition to derivative products such as salts and ethers.

    The chemicals are divided into five schedules. Schedule 1 drugs include illegal substances such as heroin. Scheduled II drugs, such as Adderall and other stimulants, have a medical use but a high potential for abuse. Schedule III drugs have a somewhat lower abuse potential and include the painkiller Vicodin, while Schedule IV drugs include the tranquilizers Klonopin and Ativan. Schedule V substances include cough medicines such as Robitussin.

    Adderall is popular on college campuses, even among those who do not have ADHD but want a performance boost. Students may trade the drug or get it from their siblings or parents.

    Stimulants appear to work in patients with ADHD by increasing the availability in the brain of the chemicals dopamine and norepinephrine, which both appear to help regulate attention and executive function. Their effects differ slightly depending on the drug, and some people respond better to one than another.

    "In every suburban high school and in colleges there is a significant underground economy around stimulants," said Harry Tracy, a psychologist and publisher of NeuroPerspective, a monthly publication focusing on central nervous system disorders. "Adderall can go for $5 to $10 a pop."

    Physicians say it can be challenging to sort out who is a legitimate patient and who might seek the drug simply to enhance performance.

    "Trying to determine the best thing to do can be a quandary at times because there is this question of whether the person is trying to get the medication for nonmedical reasons," said Steven Cuffe, a child psychiatrist and Chairman of the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Florida College of Medicine.

    Right now patients are trying to scrape by, either by traveling long distances to fill prescriptions or switching to other products even if they don't work as well or are more expensive. But these are temporary workarounds and without a structural change manufacturers and advocate groups fear the problem will linger or even worsen.

    "This does not seem to be a short-term solvable problem," Hughes said.

    (Additional reporting by Ransdell Pierson and Lewis Krauskopf in New York, Jessica Wohl in Chicago; Editing by Michele Gershberg, Martin Howell in New York.)

     
    • susan a  •  Corpus Christi, Texas  •  1 mth 25 days ago
      Several months ago my brother who has a mental disorder was switched to a different shot that he usually get every two weeks, the old shot cost $50 every two weeks which medicare pays, then a month later the new shot bill came which cost $850, of course the doctors office did tell him he had to switch shots because of a shortage but not the huge cost increase. When we complained about the cost of this one shot and that it was not effective like his old shot which he had been on for over 20 years they put him back on the old shot and now he is fine. My wonder, how many people were switched from a simple $50 shot to a $850 shot, something sounds wicked with that and it came out of medicare which comes out of the paychecks of USA Workers!!! Stop stealing our money!!
    • peter  •  1 mth 25 days ago
      My grandson all of a sudden was diagnosed with ADHD ( by his dad and a compliant physician ) after a miserable performance in his first year of college. It persisted for 2 more years. Finally, after his junior year, he realized that while he might eventually graduate he would join the ranks of all the incompetent college graduates who did not qualify for a decent job. So, he finally stopped the partying and pot and excessive alcohol consumption. Last year he had an A minus average, is doing equally well this year (his 5th to make up for the dropped courses ) and a 'miracle' occurred -- no more adderall or ADHD. Amazing, at least for some people, what cleaning up your diet and behavior will do for you.
    • Observer  •  Eugene, Oregon  •  1 mth 25 days ago
      I saw a report a while back, where special corporations buy up limited stock drugs, and then turn around and resell for a high profit. Their profit margins depend on creating shortages. They could make 1000% profits. A sweet deal for their investors.
    • sil_serp  •  North Chicago, Illinois  •  1 mth 25 days ago
      Struggling at keeping supply up or doing it on purpose to keep the price up...
    • Givemeabreak  •  1 mth 25 days ago
      Don't know how it works in every state, but in mine a kid on these meds nets the school more funds, so obviously it is worthwhile in that set-up to diagnose more & more of them. As usual, follow the money.
    • Anti  •  1 mth 25 days ago
      18 million prescriptions in the US? That is over 5% of the population of the country.

      If 1 out of every 20 people in the US are on this drug, something is wrong. Certainly, there are people who need this medicine, but 18 million prescriptions seems HIGHLY excessive.
    • Tracy N  •  Columbia, South Carolina  •  1 mth 24 days ago
      I took Adderall for a year and all I have to say is that doctors and pharmaceutical companies have found a way to legalize cocaine!!!! I loved and hated adderall. I love it because it made me feel strong and powerful...like I was superwoman and then at the same time I felt like the only way to be motivated or feel good was to take adderall. I finally quit and I am so very very happy I did. Also, I know a many people, girls in particular who take this medication for the sole purpose of losing weight. So for all you who say that kids are taking this...think again. Kids may be PRESCRIBED this but i bet the MOMMAS are taking it! Hey it does help I admit, but let me just say that eventually your body will stop responding and i cannot imagine what is going on INSIDE of your body. Your RHR should not be above 70 and on this medication it sits at about 95 or higher. You are overworking your heart on this medication. You can't even workout you'd probably have a heart attack!! Yea its bad but they are making so much money so it doesn't matter how bad it is when money is all that matters to some people.
    • None  •  1 mth 25 days ago
      my mom just lets me run around the yard for a few hours
    • Sean  •  Aurora, Oregon  •  1 mth 25 days ago
      It is time to wean our future off of the manufactured crisis that the drug companies pushed in order to open a then untapped market....Our children. I am not saying that there aren't legitimate cases out there, but millions of kids??? Seriously?? Drugs are not a replacement for nurturing. It is a sad state that we find ourselves giving out drugs to our future and placing them in front of the idiot box (tv) instead of parenting. I am not hopeful for our future if one in 5 kids are being medicated....Kids are hyper, kids act out, it is part of growing up. We have replaced discipline with drugs in way too many cases....As a child I was spanked....yep that's right, corporal punishment, thank God that was how I was taught, and not with personality numbing drugs...It is time for us to wake up as a society.
    • snoopsister  •  Reseda, California  •  1 mth 25 days ago
      A lot of speed freaks pretend to have ADD to obtain Adderall!
    • Tabbs  •  1 mth 25 days ago
      We have a daughter with ADD. She struggles in school, not because she doesn't understand the work, but because she cannot transfer her thoughts to paper. She can answer you correctly verbally all day long. Once we worked with the school and got her into an inclusion classroom where there is more than one teacher and got the written work load reduced, she does fine. She still has to do the work, she just doesn't have to write it all out.
      During all the fight with the school to get her the extra help she needed in the classroom, they suggested taking her to a child psychiatrist and getting her medicated. We have had several appointments with the psychiatrist where he has said "just one more visit and then we'll make progress." Well after a year of visits and not making any progress at all, we haven't taken her back recently. I came to the conclusion that he was just liking that insurance money too much and we weren't really going to get anywhere. We decided to make dietary changes and to add vitamins. It worked decently well and we aren't fighting the prescription hoo-haa. Sure, she still has rough days, but the fact is that she is a child and all children have rough days. Sure, we have to remind her to stay on task sometimes, but I was under the impression that that was a part of parenting. Are there days when it is frustrating beyond belief? Yes. But meds wouldn't necessarily fix that either. Try working with your children instead of constantly throwing drugs at them.
    • brendon  •  1 mth 25 days ago
      Maybe the doctors should stop diagnosing EVERYTHING as ADHD.
    • MizLindsay  •  1 mth 24 days ago
      Here's a little known fact that many teachers and parents fail to consider when they think a child has ADHD: this is a condition that is pervasive; meaning it affects the child/adult in EVERY area of their life. If your child/student acts up or seems to show ADHD symptoms in school, but not home, or vice-versa, then it likely is NOT ADHD.
    • PrimeDirective  •  1 mth 25 days ago
      ADHD is used as a catch all for parents and teachers who are unable or unwilling to work with some children. There are alot of legitimate diagnoses of ADD/ ADHD however as a therapist I have teacher with no psychological training tell me a kid has ADHD... when I completed the assessment I found that the childs behaviors were consistent with the behaviors of an 8 year old. Other children have had success in treating ADHD w. behavior modification instead of medication... as a therapist I firmly believe medicating any mental health issue must be combined with appropriate therapy... most ADHD kids are put on meds and see their pediatrician every time they need a refill.. this helps chemically stabilize the child but does not teach them how to manage their condition without the medication which can be dont to mitigate the effects of ADHD on their every day lives. This will also help lower the average dose children are on of these medications to minimize dependence and side effects of these drugs
    • Kiwi is my bird-o  •  1 mth 25 days ago
      One of my best friends has REAL ADD. I've known him since grade school, and the way he has always behaved is a world of difference from all these kids who run amok because no one has ever told them not to. He suffers from involuntary movements, and cannot physically be still. He's always jittery, always pacing and it affects his sleep. He talks at the speeds of a auctioneer, and often changes subjects mid-sentence. As an adult, he's been stopped walking before by the cops because they thought he was high on drugs. It a horrible thing to see someone you've known most of you life who's always been a good friend and good person suffer from. It makes me so sad and angry to think people who genuinely suffer from these problems are lumped in with a bunch of little monsters who's parents never took the time to discipline them. I think most cases should be called LADD (Lack of Adult Discipline Disorder). Stop feeding all these little kiddies government meth because they misbehave, and start recommending remedial parenting classes first before "diagnosing" them with a tragic disorder.    
    • Matthew  •  1 mth 25 days ago
      In our quick-fix society these things are being WAYYY over prescribed anyway. It's a shame we can't address anything as important as parental involvement, or the lack there of, in these sort of trends. Unfortunately, as we've all seen, you can't spend a minute away from slaving on the job or your seen as a lazy, probably drug abusing, free-loading, #$%$ And God forbid anyone mention anything like increasing the amount of maternity or family leave for any parent ("that's socialism" they all shout). I mean what kind of sick society do we live in where, even many in the working classes, put profit above people, even their own families?
    • pagerr2  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  1 mth 25 days ago
      Just another colossal over used narcotic.
      Seems I read somewhere a few years ago that
      parents get a disability check for their children
      who take this drug because of taking Ritalin.
      Now some of those want a stronger Adderall.
      Might as well start okaying marijuana for all the
      high school and college kids who take the stuff
      so they do not have to study to pass a test.
      We are dumbing down society as it is with
      all the drugs...legal and illegal..
    • cerberus  •  Tahoma, California  •  1 mth 25 days ago
      drugging people into submission.
    • Gary Hauler  •  Cheyenne, Wyoming  •  1 mth 25 days ago
      I hope I aint the only one that can SEE the connection
      between ADHD and Corporate American $$$$$'s.
      This is a HUGE conspiracy that must be solved.
      No wonder Medical Companies are AGAINST
      affordable National Healthcare policy.
    • cybernaut  •  1 mth 23 days ago
      Do we really need this addictive stimulant to survive? HOW DID CAVEMEN DO IT?!
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