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News (Media Awareness Project) - US MA: A New Drug To End Drug Abuse
Title:US MA: A New Drug To End Drug Abuse
Published On:2004-05-27
Source:Worcester Magazine (MA)
Fetched On:2008-01-18 09:09:51
A NEW DRUG TO END DRUG ABUSE

A Substitute For Methadone Could Dramatically Change How Addicts Get
Clean

For a heroin addict on the long, hard road toward recovery, there's
generally one available outside aid: Methadone, a substitute for heroin and
other opiates, which has been in use for more than 30 years.

But methadone presents its own challenges. You can't just walk into a CVS
and fill a prescription for it, for one thing. Instead, you have to wait in
line, every day, at one of the few local clinics licensed to dispense the
drug, such as Spectrum Health Systems on Lincoln Street.

Those familiar with drug detoxification say methadone programs aren't
always user-friendly. They require an allotment of time that demands
serious commitment before treatment even begins. A daily trip to get
medication can be time-consuming and disruptive -- maybe too disruptive to
leave room for a recovering addict to recover his or her normal life,
particularly if that normal life involves a job with regular 9-to-5 hours.

All of that could soon change. A growing number of Worcester doctors have
begun providing the drug buprenorphine, rather than methadone, to patients
trying to kick heroin or other opiate-based drugs such as Oxycontin.

Methadone is injected. Buprenorphine is taken orally, under the tongue.
Doctors can prescribe it like any other medication and patients can take it
at their convenience. That means no more daily trips to the methadone
clinic and less of the stigma associated with such treatment.

Buprenorphine can be used either for straight detoxification purposes, to
help someone quit drugs entirely; or like methadone, as a maintenance
therapy, in which a patient continues to take the drug as a stand-in for
the illicit substance, but without the extreme high and without the drastic
symptoms of withdrawal.

The federal government is limiting distribution of the drug for now (it was
approved in 2002.) Any doctor or member of a group practice must take a
required training course, and even then, an individual doctor or group
practice may prescribe it to only 30 patients. Doctors who use the drug now
predict that those regulations will be somewhat relaxed in the coming year.

A list maintained by the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
Administration shows that eight Worcester doctors are certified to provide
buprenorphine. One of them is Dr. Robert Pike, medical director of AdCare
Hospital in Worcester, one of the region's largest detoxification centers.
He says that demand for buprenorphine is already huge. "Most of the docs I
talk to are full already," he says. "It's incredible .... Most of the
gentlemen I talk to like the drug, most of the patients like the drug and
they like the detox."

But Pike says the drug's high cost could be a barrier to more widespread
use. "Unless the insurance companies pick it up, it is going to be out of
reach for a lot of people," he says. "You are talking $3 to $5 a pill. I
give them 16 milligrams [a day]. That's four pills. That's $12 a day times
30 [days in a month.] It's incredible." In comparison, methadone costs just
35 cents a day, he says.

While buprenorphine's long-term effectiveness is yet untested, there's
little question that there need to be options to methadone as a treatment.
According to some federal statistics, more than 800,000 people in the
United States use heroin and millions are hooked on other opiate-based
drugs; but only about 200,000 people are being treated at methadone clinics.

Another Worcester doctor licensed to prescribe buprenorphine, Dr. Jeffrey
Baxter, says the local situation reflects those stark national statistics.
Baxter describes Worcester as a "hot spot for heroin," although he stresses
that it's hardly the only one. Still, he says, "For a small city, Worcester
has a large heroin problem." Moreover, there are more users coming to
Worcester these days for treatment because many other detox facilities --
including ones in Leominster and Framingham -- have been closed due to
state budget cuts, he explains: "We get all those people."

Baxter, who practices at the Family Health Center of Worcester on Queen
Street, says his group practice has 12 patients successfully using the
drug, which it started prescribing about three months ago.

Baxter says that many doctors are simply afraid to try the drug out. "I've
been going to group practices and people are saying we don't want more
[drug users visiting] our practices," he says. "I say to them, these folks
[who could benefit from] this medicine are going to be showing up in your
practices anyway." He says medical students receive little training in drug
treatment, and thus haven't developed the skills needed to feel comfortable
administering such care.

Baxter describes opiate addiction as a disease, comparing it to diabetes.
"[With diabetes] there's something missing [in a patient's body chemistry]
and you replace it [with insulin]," he says. "Same thing with [opiate
addiction]. There's just something missing."

Baxter says that having weighed "decades" of statistical evidence, he's
come to believe in maintenance therapy over straight detox programs. "My
bias is to go with what works," he says. "And maintenance is what works."

While doctors like Baxter appear bullish about buprenorphine's potential,
there are differing opinions. In a May 6 article, Dr. Ron Brady, medical
director of a methadone program in New York City, told New York Newsday
that he wants to "see that it works before I start using it. I have learned
that some patients should never be alone when taking their medicine."

Others have cautioned that the drug, while promising, shouldn't be viewed
as a silver bullet. In a Sept. 2003 letter to The Boston Globe, Northampton
resident Tobe Reichlin wrote of a friend's overdose on heroin after
beginning buprenorphine therapy. "Yes, buprenorphine is a miracle drug," he
wrote. "[But] a person in recovery desperately needs intensive professional
counseling. Dropping a recovering addict back into life without the support
systems necessary is asking for tragic, needless deaths."
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