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    New powerful painkiller has abuse experts worried

    NEW YORK (AP) — Drug companies are working to develop a pure, more powerful version of the nation's second most-abused medicine, which has addiction experts worried that it could spur a new wave of abuse.

    The new pills contain the highly addictive painkiller hydrocodone, packing up to 10 times the amount of the drug as existing medications such as Vicodin. Four companies have begun patient testing, and one of them — Zogenix of San Diego — plans to apply early next year to begin marketing its product, Zohydro.

    If approved, it would mark the first time patients could legally buy pure hydrocodone. Existing products combine the drug with nonaddictive painkillers such as acetaminophen.

    Critics say they are especially worried about Zohydro, a timed-release drug meant for managing moderate to severe pain, because abusers could crush it to release an intense, immediate high.

    "I have a big concern that this could be the next OxyContin," said April Rovero, president of the National Coalition Against Prescription Drug Abuse. "We just don't need this on the market."

    OxyContin, introduced in 1995 by Purdue Pharma of Stamford, Conn., was designed to manage pain with a formula that dribbled one dose of oxycodone over many hours.

    Abusers quickly discovered they could defeat the timed-release feature by crushing the pills. Purdue Pharma changed the formula to make OxyContin more tamper-resistant, but addicts have moved onto generic oxycodone and other drugs that do not have a timed-release feature.

    Oxycodone is now the most-abused medicine in the United States, with hydrocodone second, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration's annual count of drug seizures sent to police drug labs for analysis.

    The latest drug tests come as more pharmaceutical companies are getting into the $10 billion-a-year legal market for powerful — and addictive — opiate narcotics.

    "It's like the wild west," said Peter Jackson, co-founder of Advocates for the Reform of Prescription Opioids. "The whole supply-side system is set up to perpetuate this massive unloading of opioid narcotics on the American public."

    The pharmaceutical firms say the new hydrocodone drugs give doctors another tool to try on patients in legitimate pain, part of a constant search for better painkillers to treat the aging U.S. population.

    "Sometimes you circulate a patient between various opioids, and some may have a better effect than others," said Karsten Lindhardt, chief executive of Denmark-based Egalet, which is testing its own pure hydrocodone product.

    The companies say a pure hydrocodone pill would avoid liver problems linked to high doses of acetaminophen, an ingredient in products like Vicodin. They also say patients will be more closely supervised because, by law, they will have to return to their doctors each time they need more pills. Prescriptions for the weaker, hydrocodone-acetaminophen products now on the market can be refilled up to five times.

    Zogenix has completed three rounds of patient testing, and last week it announced it had held a final meeting with Food and Drug Administration officials to talk about its upcoming drug application. It plans to file the application in early 2012 and have Zohydro on the market by early 2013.

    Purdue Pharma and Cephalon, a Frazer, Pa.-based unit of Israel-based Teva Pharmaceuticals, are conducting late-stage trials of their own hydrocodone drugs, according to documents filed with federal regulators. In May, Purdue Pharma received a patent applying extended-release technology to hydrocodone. Neither company would comment on its plans.

    Meanwhile, Egalet has finished the most preliminary stages of testing aimed at determining the basic safety of a drug. The firm could have a product on the market as early as 2015 but wants to see how the other companies fare with the FDA before deciding whether to move forward, Lindhardt said.

    Critics say they are troubled because of the dark side that has accompanied the boom in sales of narcotic painkillers: Murders, pharmacy robberies and millions of dollars lost by hospitals that must treat overdose victims.

    Thousands of legitimate pain patients are becoming addicted to powerful prescription painkillers, they say, in addition to the thousands more who abuse the drugs.

    Prescription painkillers led to the deaths of almost 15,000 people in 2008, more than triple the 4,000 deaths in 1999, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported last month.

    Emergency room visits related to hydrocodone abuse have shot from 19,221 in 2000 to 86,258 in 2009, according to data compiled by the Drug Enforcement Administration. In Florida alone, hydrocodone caused 910 deaths and contributed to 1,803 others between 2003 and 2007.

    Hydrocodone belongs to family of drugs known as opiates or opioids because they are chemically similar to opium. They include morphine, heroin, oxycodone, codeine, methadone and hydromorphone.

    Opiates block pain but also unleash intense feelings of well-being and can create physical dependence. The withdrawal symptoms are also intense, with users complaining of cramps, diarrhea, muddled thinking, nausea and vomiting.

    After a while, opiates stop working, forcing users to take stronger doses or to try slightly different chemicals.

    "You've got a person on your product for life, and a doctor's got a patient who's never going to miss an appointment, because if they did and they didn't get their prescription, they would feel very sick," said Andrew Kolodny, president of Physicians for Responsible Opioid Prescribing. "It's a terrific business model, and that's what these companies want to get in on."

    Under pressure from the government, Purdue Pharma last year debuted a new OxyContin pill formula that "squishes" instead of crumbling when someone tries to crush it.

    But Zogenix, whose drug is time-released but crushable, says there is not enough evidence to show that such tamper-resistant reformulations thwart abuse.

    "Provided sufficient effort, all formulations currently available can be overcome," Zogenix said in a written response to questions by The Associated Press.

    At a conference for investors New York on Nov. 29, Zogenix chief executive Roger Hawley said the FDA was not pressuring Zogenix to put an abuse deterrent in Zohydro.

    "We would certainly consider later launching an abuse-deterrent form, but right now we believe the priority of safer hydrocodone — that is, without acetaminophen — is a key priority for the FDA," Hawley said.

    FDA spokeswoman Erica Jefferson said the agency would not comment on its discussions with drug companies, citing the need to protect trade secrets.

    Drug control advocates say they're worried the U.S. government is too lax about controlling addictive pain medications. The United States consumes 99 percent of the world's hydrocodone and 83 percent of its oxycodone, according to a 2008 study by the International Narcotics Control Board.

    One 41-year-old loophole in particular has fed the current problem with hydrocodone abuse, critics say. The federal Controlled Substances Act, passed in 1970, puts fewer controls on combination pills containing hydrocodone and another painkiller than it does on the equivalent oxycodone products.

    A Vicodin prescription can be refilled five times, for example, while a Percocet prescription can only be filled once.

    The Drug Enforcement Administration and Food and Drug Administration have been studying whether to close this loophole since 1999 but have made no decision. Congress is now considering a bill that would force the agencies to tighten the controls.

    "This is a problem that is fundamentally an oversupply problem," said Jackson, the drug-control advocate. "The FDA has kind of opened the floodgates, and they refuse to recognize the mistakes made in the past."

    Pure hydrocodone falls into the stricter drug-control category than hydrocodone-acetaminophen medications, meaning patients would have to go to their doctors for a new prescription each time they needed more pills. But Jackson said that's no guarantee against abuse, noting that dozens of unscrupulous doctors have been caught churning out prescriptions in so-called "pill mills."

    The Drug Enforcement Administration, which enforces controls on medicines along with the FDA, said it could not comment on drugs that have not yet been approved for sale.

    However, Zogenix has acknowledged the abuse issue could become a liability.

    "Illicit use and abuse of hydrocodone is well documented," it said in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission in September. "Thus, the regulatory approval process and the marketing of Zohydro may generate public controversy that may adversely affect regulatory approval and market acceptance of Zohydro."

     
    • D  •  1 mth 15 days ago
      I am amazed at the amount of people who actually fell for this lie and think these "new" (they are not) "Super Painkillers" are some dramatic threat. They are the same old drugs that have been around for decades.

      The difference is the additives in them that would be removed (though they also already exist like that in a higher schedule. This higher schedule gives the government greater ability to pressure physicians NOT to use the medication for their patients, regardless of how much pain they are in). The point is that the government does not want to give up any control. They must ALWAYS create some sort of evil person/substance to blame for why they need more money, more employees, more rules and laws.

      These "new" preparations would drop the acetaminophen. That drug is intended to blow your liver and kill you if you take more than the recommended dosing. One of the many formulations made by big pharma, pandering to our humongous government-anti-drug industry, intended to cause death or serious illness rather than allow "abuse". Of course, if you added up the cost of the emergency hospitalizations, ICU days and liver transplants (and their lifetime of follow-up medications and medical visits), said acetaminophen-free drugs would save millions of dollars and untold lives!

      But then, those are just facts. This is not about facts. It's ALL about provoking knee-jerk reactions in the people programmed to reflexively jump if they hear "pain medication" or some variation thereof. Don't be one, do the research, read the facts...then react.
    • pwood246  •  Cleveland, Ohio  •  1 mth 28 days ago
      the war on drugs is lost all it is now is a cash cow for the government. i have had 5 back surgerys and the doctors are so scared of the government that im forced to live in pain day and night i went through 3 years of every kind of therapy there is when i lived in AZ. the doctor gave me Oxycontin enough that i was out of pain and could lead a normal life now in ohio all i get is Vicodin and i can barely make myself a meal and clean up. if you ask me ill take being addicted to opits and have a life rather than spending 20 hours a day flat on my back because it hurts to much to walk or even stand
    • LadyAgentProvocateur  •  1 mth 28 days ago
      All your fussing over people who want to die has left us chronic pain patients dying slow painful deaths. The junkies get to go quick. Lay down and go to sleep. The people on the other side of that issue are laying awake in utter misery and committing suicide because you have doctors scared to death to deal with it.

      We know you BELIEVE that the medical industry treats real pain, but not anymore. Not since you people started worrying about junkies...who don't care if they die. The irony is enough to keep a chronic pain patient in the bathroom puking over it. That is, of course, when we're not puking from the pain.
    • Tom2  •  Columbus, Ohio  •  1 mth 28 days ago
      So keep people in pain to stop abuse? That's not right.
    • TJ  •  1 mth 28 days ago
      The dea should be sued for "practicing medicine without a license". It is unconscionable to deny those with intractable pain ANY form of relief.
    • Ron  •  1 mth 28 days ago
      No matter what the substance....some will benefit...and some will abuse. That's human nature and that's just the way it is.
    • chicken little  •  Charlotte, North Carolina  •  1 mth 28 days ago
      dumb people will always find drugs whether it be smelling salts or this. Stop worring about drug addicts and worry about helping the people that this drug was intended for.
    • james  •  Tampa, Florida  •  1 mth 28 days ago
      Im personally dealing with chronic pain daily (neck surgery) and i dont abuse, but if it helps people with pain what is the problems most of these experts are complete #$%$
    • Stephanie  •  Elizabeth, New Jersey  •  1 mth 28 days ago
      My God, can't believe I'm saying this: the drug companies are right. The damage to your liver that comes from mixing the codeine with tylenol is MUCH worse. You ninnies need to stop policing our morals. Those who want to spend their lives nodding out with always find a way to do so. Why wreck their livers so you can feel good about stopping them from getting a better buzz? Isn't that a little sick? I had an infected wisdom tooth and they gave me Tylenol 3 with codeine (one every six hours) and I had to eat like four at a time to have ANY relief. Did this for one day before I gave up and bummed a better pill off an older relative. Pain was gone. Once the antibiotics worked, I STOPPED. Didn't need any Puritans to monitor me to make it happen. Opiates are non-toxic, tylenol can kill you.
    • Christopher  •  San Antonio, Texas  •  1 mth 28 days ago
      Many Doctors are willing to allow their patients to suffer only because of some of the A-holes on this board and they are afraid of the DEA.There has always been abuse and the biggest drug that is abused daily and cost the taxpayers millions everyday is alcohol.I would rather be around those that use pot than a bunch of drunks.
    • Shawn  •  Richmond, Virginia  •  1 mth 28 days ago
      THERE ARE PEOPLE WHO ARE REALLY IN HORRIFIC PAIN!!!! DONT LET THE DRUG POLICE STOP COMPANIES FROM SEARCHING FOR HELP FOR THEM. if abusers want to abuse, well, let them kill themselves but dont PUNISH THE TRULY SICK PEOPLE.
    • Tinn  •  1 mth 28 days ago
      Acetaminophen has been proven to cause liver damage, and is the leading cause of Acute Liver Failure in the United States.
    • mustangmama  •  1 mth 28 days ago
      The only pain killer I could tolerate was Darvocet and they took it off the market after years of people taking it with no problems. FDA are a bunch of idiots.
    • Robert  •  Bangkok, Thailand  •  1 mth 28 days ago
      So these so called experts want to deny these drugs to those in chronic pain who would legitimately benefit from them just because some other fools might abuse them? The stupidity of these so called experts is astounding.
      For those who would abuse these drugs, it's their bodies let them so long as they are not driving a car.
    • Oscar  •  1 mth 28 days ago
      The pharmaceutical industry, insurance cos, doctors, and neighbors are not in charge of keeping you healthy. You are. Drug manufacturers are driven by the primary goal of generating profit. They could give a crap about helping people in need. Note that the aceto (tylenol) that they add to Vicodin preparations are there in order to hurt you if you take too much. Tylenol destroys your liver worse than booze.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  1 mth 28 days ago
      opiates are one of the reasons for the vietnam war. ask any refugee that is here and you will find that the more ancient cultures figured out long ago how to use medicinal plants, including both cannabis and opiates. us policies only keep the police busy and the dea free range to line the pockets of the wicked. drug companies will lose their billions in profits from mainly ineffective pain killers. nature has provided man with low cost pain relief and man has the audacity to make it illegal.
    • scotth  •  Tacoma, Washington  •  1 mth 28 days ago
      Those of us who have extreme pain and need to take a "pain pill" can hardly get the doctor to sign off.
      Easily gotten on the street for way to much money and risk of jail or worse.
      Let Darwin sort out the weak and those of us in true need be pain free.
    • Neko  •  San Jose, California  •  1 mth 28 days ago
      Oviously the people who oppose these medical miracles are immune to all pain and have never suffered!
    • william  •  1 mth 28 days ago
      so true it make it hard for those that are truly in pain, in texas they look at you like your a addict, if you ask for pain killers! I reinjured my back last years and the doctor I saw was scared of "undercover" patients and gave me a " prescription for ibuprofen that I could have just bought over the counter! what happens to the people that need pain relief in order to function???
    • ripdog  •  Fayetteville, North Carolina  •  1 mth 28 days ago
      They need take out all the tylenol and other aspirin from hydrocodone because these ingredients are what is causeing LIVER problems and killing people its not the #$%$ pain medications so i say yes to cleaning them up maybe they will kill alot less people that has to take them and maybe it will help them and hopefully they will make it harder for these IDIOTS thats getting them when they shouldnt be not be able to do so
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