The U.S. should rethink its entire approach to painkillers and the people addicted to them, panel urges
To reverse a still-spiraling
American crisis fueled by prescription narcotic drugs, a panel of experts
advising the federal government has recommended sweeping changes in the ways
that physicians treat pain, their patients cope with pain, and government and
private insurers support the care of people living with chronic pain.
In a comprehensive report on
what must be done to staunch the toll of opiates in the United States, a panel
of the National Academies of Science, Engineering and Medicine makes clear that
steps needed to prevent the creation of future opiate addicts will drive some
people who are now dependent on these medications toward street drugs such as
fentanyl and heroin.
“It is therefore ethically
imperative to couple a strategy for reducing lawful access to opioids with an
investment in treatment for the millions of individuals” already hooked on the
painkillers, the panel wrote.
Even as lawmakers in Washington
debate a healthcare bill expected to reduce access to addiction treatment, the
expert panel called on states and the federal government to provide “universal
access” to such treatment in hospitals, community-based programs, jails and
prisons.
To reduce harms to opioid users
who have turned to the streets for their supply, the panel also urged states to
buck a current trend of getting tough on illicit drug use. Instead of
escalating criminal penalties for drug-related behaviors, the panel said states
should adopt practices — including needle exchanges, safe havens for
injection-drug users, and broadened access to the opioid-reversal agent
naloxone — that reduce overdose deaths and prevent the spread of disease.
A Philadelphia police officer
holds a package of the overdose reversal agent naloxone hydrochloride, which is
sold under the brand name Narcan. A new report urges "universal
access" to addiction treatment. (Dominick Reuter / AFP / Getty Images)
In 2015, some 2 million Americans
were thought to be abusing prescription narcotics. Another 600,000 were using
heroin, the majority of them onetime prescription opiate users. The report
cites research suggesting that, among patients prescribed opioid pain
relievers, at least 8% develop “opioid use disorder” and 15% to 26% engage in
problematic behaviors that suggest they have become dependent.
“The numbers are extraordinary
and unfortunately it’s still getting worse,” said Richard J. Bonnie, chairman of the panel and director of
the University of Virginia School of Law’s Institute of Law, Psychiatry and
Public Policy.
“We have a habit in our country
of noticing certain problems … and then moving on to something else,” Bonnie
said. But even with the kind of sustained, “all-hands-on-deck” approach
required, the opioid drug epidemic, more than two decades in the making, “will
take some significant period of time to unwind,” he added.
Dr. Leana Wen,
health commissioner for the city of Baltimore, said the new report’s
recommendations are “hard to argue with, because they are comprehensive and
evidence-based.” But Wen, who has been an outspoken voice for broader access to
addiction treatment, said she had hoped for less fretting over incomplete
research findings and more focus on how to expand treatment services.
“We already know what works,” she
said. While more could be understood about the biology of addiction, “we do not
need more studies” to justify expanded treatment programs. “We do not more
rhetoric. We need the resources to get us there.”
The report released Thursday was
requested and underwritten by the Food and Drug Administration, an agency whose
approach to regulating opioid painkillers would come in for some strong
medicine under the panel’s recommendation.
The panel of independent experts
proposed that in assessing the safety of prescription opioid drugs for the U.S.
market, the FDA consider risks not just to the patients taking them, but also
to their families and communities.
New formulations of opioid
medications should be subject to that higher standard, the panel said. In
addition, manufacturers of those drugs should be required to conduct extensive
studies of their products’ use after FDA approval, and the agency should
reevaluate their safety one, four, and six years after their entry onto the
U.S. market.
Once the FDA has established new
standards for evaluating the safety of proposed new opioid products, it should
reassess all opiate medications currently on the market according to the same
requirements, the committee said.
Panel members said that while
imposing that “exceptional” standard on opioid medications represents an
expansion of current practice, the FDA already has the power to broaden and
expand its regulatory practices for certain risky drugs.
The numbers are extraordinary and
unfortunately it’s still getting worse.— Richard J. Bonnie, chairman of the
panel that produced the new National Academies report
Many of the panel’s proposals are
likely to fly into political headwinds. President Trump has called the crisis of opioid
addiction one of his administration’s top priorities, and established a
commission, chaired by New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, to formulate federal
responses.
But with that commission’s report
incomplete, Trump and his congressional allies are pursuing a wide range of
policies that would appear to conflict with those identified by the National
Academies panel as needed to stem the epidemic.
In its first months in office,
the Trump administration has moved to reduce funding for a wide range of
biomedical research and to slash regulations at the FDA. The National Academies
report both proposes new layers of FDA regulation for opioid drugs and calls
for expanded research on pain processes in humans, on factors that contribute to
addiction vulnerability and treatment success, on prescribing practices, and on
opiate use patterns and their consequences.
On Capitol Hill on Thursday,
Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky unveiled a healthcare bill that would scale back
public funds for addiction treatment. The new bill also would give insurance
companies more latitude to offer consumers low-cost policies stripped of
services such as treatment for addiction for mental health, or that transfer to
customers the cost of services such as non-drug therapies for pain.
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