Sessions Wants More Cuts in Opioid Production

By Pat Anson, Editor

Attorney General Jeff Sessions has proposed further tightening in the supply of opioid pain medication to punish drug makers who allow too many of their painkillers to be diverted and abused.

Under the proposal, the Drug Enforcement Administration – which is overseen by the Justice Department – must consider whether an opioid medication is being misused, abused or causing overdoses when it sets annual production quotas for drug makers.

“The current regulations, issued initially in 1971, need to be updated to reflect changes in the manufacture of controlled substances, changing patterns of substance abuse and markets in illicit drugs, and the challenges presented by the current national crisis of controlled substance abuse,” the DEA said in a notice to be published in the Federal Register.  

WHITE HOUSE PHOTO

“Under this proposed new rule, if DEA believes that a company’s opioids are being diverted for misuse, then they will reduce the amount of opioids that company can make,” Sessions said. "It’s a common sense idea: the more a drug is diverted, the more its production should be limited." 

The cuts in opioid production could be ordered even if a drug maker has no direct role in the diversion.

"If DEA believes that a particular opioid or a particular company’s opioids are being diverted for misuse, then DEA would be able to reduce the amount that can produced in a given year. These smarter limits will encourage vigilance on the part of opioid manufacturers," the agency said in a statement.

The public has only 15 days to comment on the rule change. Public comment periods in the Federal Register are usually between 30 and 60 days long, with some taking up to 180 days. Agencies are allowed to use shorter comment periods "when that can be justified."

"This shortened period for public comment is necessary as an element in addressing the largest drug crisis in the nation's history," the DEA said. To see the rule change and make a comment, click here. Comments must be submitted on or before May 4.

The DEA has already made substantial cuts in opioid production quotas, reducing them by 25 percent in 2017, followed by another 20 percent cut in 2018. This year’s cuts were ordered despite warnings from drug makers that reduced supplies of opioids “were insufficient to provide for the estimated medical, scientific, research and industrial needs of the United States.”

Last week the DEA said it would allow three drug makers to increase their production of injectable opioids because of shortages that left hospitals scrambling to find effective analgesics to treat patients suffering from acute pain. The shortages of injectable fentanyl and morphine are largely due to manufacturing problems, although some critics say the DEA itself is partly responsible.

DEA ‘Asleep at the Switch’

The proposed rule change was triggered by a lawsuit filed against the DEA by West Virginia, alleging that the current quota system “unlawfully conflates market demand for dangerous narcotics with the amount of legitimate medical needs.”    

“The DEA -- the agency tasked with effectively limiting how many opioid pain pills can be manufactured -- has been asleep at the switch and unwilling to recognize fatal flaws within its own system,” said West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey. The lawsuit was put on hold after Sessions directed the DEA to change its rules.

Under the proposed rules, the DEA would be required to get input from states, Food and Drug Administration, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Department of Health and Human Services before setting opioid quotas.

Since becoming Attorney General, Sessions has been almost singularly focused on prescription opioids as the cause of the addiction and overdose crisis, even though about two-thirds of all overdoses are caused by black market drugs such as illicit fentanyl, heroin and cocaine. Less than one percent of legally prescribed opioids are diverted, according to the DEA’s own figures.

In February, Sessions said pain sufferers should “tough it out” and take aspirin, rather than turn to opioids for pain relief. "Sometimes you just need to take two Bufferin or something and go to bed," he said.

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Last week, Sessions visited a controversial memorial near the White House that features a wall of 22,000 engraved white pills -- each pill representing the face of someone who supposedly died from a prescription opioid overdose in 2015.

As PNN has reported, the National Safety Council’s traveling exhibit misrepresents the number of Americans who overdosed on pain medication. The CDC recently admitted that its methods for counting overdoses “significantly inflate estimates.”

More misinformation and half-truths are being published in the Federal Register to justify changes in the DEA quota system.  

“(Opioid) users may be initiated into a life of substance abuse and dependency after first obtaining these drugs from their health care providers or without cost from the family medicine cabinet or from friends. Once ensnared, dependency on potent and dangerous street drugs may ensue,” the notice says.

“About 80% of heroin users first misused prescription opioids. Thus, it may be inferred that current users of heroin and fentanyl largely entered the gateway as part of the populations who previously misused prescription opioids.”  

The notice is referring to a single but often-cited survey, which found that most heroin users in addiction treatment also abused prescription opioids. But experts say most addicts try a variety of different substances – such as tobacco, marijuana, alcohol and illicitly obtained opioid medication – before moving on to heroin. It is rare for a legitimate patient on legally prescribed opioids to make the transition to heroin.  

DEA Cutting Rx Opioid Supply in 2018

By Pat Anson, Editor

The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration is going ahead with plans to reduce the supply of many opioid painkillers by 20 percent next year. That’s in addition to steep cuts in opioid production quotas the agency imposed in 2017.

In a notice quietly published this week in the Federal Register, the DEA said it would reduce the supply of many commonly prescribed Schedule II opioid painkillers, including oxycodone, hydrocodone, oxymorphone, hydromorphone, morphine, codeine, and fentanyl. The agency said demand for the medications had dropped.

In proceeding with the cuts, which were first proposed in August, the DEA dismissed warnings from three drug makers that the reduced supplies of opioids “were insufficient to provide for the estimated medical, scientific, research and industrial needs of the United States.”

The DEA received over 100 public comments on its proposal, most of them expressing concern that any further reduction in opioids would adversely impact the availability of prescription painkillers.

“I am 75 years old, have metastatic prostate cancer in my bones and have to take high doses of fentanyl patches and morphine tablets for the chronic, intractable pain. Please do not further reduce the supply of my critical medicine,” wrote Bill Daniel.

“Please stop this misguided attempt to save people from themselves. If demand is down, it's because you bullied physicians into prescribing less, not from a genuine market conditions,” wrote one anonymous poster.

“You want to cut my access to the medication I'm legally prescribed by my pain management doctors! Would you consider the same for people deemed disabled due to other illnesses? You are going to cause millions of us to either commit suicide due to unbearable pain or turn to street drugs,” said Christa Rood.

The DEA said comments such as these dealt with medical issues that were “outside of the scope” of its order and did not offer any new data for the agency to consider.

Under federal law, the DEA sets production quotas for all manufacturers of opioid medication and other controlled substances. This year the agency reduced the amount of almost every Schedule II opioid medication by 25 percent or more. The 2017 quota for hydrocodone, which is sold under brand names like Vicodin, Lortab and Lorcet, was reduced by a third.

Those cuts were not sufficient to stop the opioid epidemic, according to two letters sent to the DEA by a group of U.S. senators. The first letter, sent in July, urged that "further reductions... are necessary to rein in this epidemic.”

A second letter, sent in September, said there was "no adequate justification for the volume of opioids approved for the market." The senators asked to DEA to make the 2018 cuts in the opioid supply at least as deep as they were in 2017. 

Opioid prescriptions have actually been in decline for several years.  According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, opioid prescribing in the U.S. has fallen by 18 percent since 2010.  

In recent years, heroin and illicit fentanyl have emerged as the driving forces behind the overdose crisis, which killed an estimated 64,000 Americans in 2016. Despite that, federal efforts to prevent overdose deaths remain largely focused on reducing the use of prescription painkillers.

The CDC, for example, is spending $4.2 million on an Rx Awareness campaign in four states; running ads on billboards, radio, newspapers and online that warn about the risks of prescription painkillers. Although a recent CDC study found fentanyl was involved in over half the overdoses in ten states, the agency says it has no plans to include fentanyl or heroin in its awareness campaign.

“Our aim with this campaign is to prevent prescription opioid overdose deaths, since prescription opioids continue to be involved in more overdose deaths than any other drug. Based on studies of people entering treatment, the majority of people with opioid use disorder (including heroin use disorder) still start with prescription opioids,” CDC spokesperson Courtney Lenard said in an email.

16 Senators Urge DEA to Lower Opioid Supply Again

By Pat Anson, Editor

Sixteen U.S. senators have sent a letter to the head of the Drug Enforcement Administration asking the agency to consider further cuts in the supply of hydrocodone, oxycodone and other opioid pain medication in 2018.

The DEA, which regulates that amount of controlled substances that can be manufactured each year, reduced the quota for Schedule II opioids by 25 percent or more in 2017 after receiving a similar letter last summer.  The supply of hydrocodone, one of the most widely used painkillers, was cut by 34 percent.

“We commend DEA on taking initial steps last year to lower production quotas for the first time in a generation,” the senators wrote to DEA acting administrator Chuck Rosenberg.

“However, the 2017 production quota levels for numerous schedule II opioids remain dramatically higher than they were a decade ago.  Further reductions, through DEA’s existing quota-setting authority, are necessary to rein in this epidemic.”

The letter, which was drafted by Illinois Democrat Dick Durbin, was signed by 15 other Democrats and one Independent: Senators Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio), Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.), Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.), Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), Tammy Baldwin (D-Wisc.), Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.), Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), Catherine Cortez Masto (D-Nev.), Maggie Hassan (D-N.H.), Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), Al Franken (D-Minn.) and Angus King (I-Maine).

Between 1993 and 2015, the senators say the DEA allowed production quotas for oxycodone to increase 39-fold, hydrocodone to increase 12-fold, hydromorphone to increase 23-fold, and fentanyl to increase 25-fold.

Production quotas may have been rising, but opioid prescriptions have actually been falling for several years.  Last week the CDC released a report acknowledging that opioid prescribing in the U.S. has fallen by 18 percent since 2010.  

Many PNN readers have complained that since the 2017 quotas were adopted they now have trouble getting legitimate prescriptions filled because pharmacies do not keep enough pain medication in stock.

“My pharmacy has been trying to fill my pain medication for 6 days now,” wrote Karen. “So I call my pain management office and (they) don't know there is a shortage! Help us get our medication!”

“I am horrified by the absolute stupidity of these lawmakers who have no business making any decisions about my pain management!” wrote Tracey, who has been taking pain medication for 5 years. “All of the lawmakers said this would not affect those with already established chronic pain! Well guess what they lied!”

“I am writing to each one of these senators and letting them know how I feel on this issue. We need to vote these people OUT of office come election time, send them a powerful message. Although at this point the damage is already done. People like myself shouldn't have to consider suicide to end their constant pain,” wrote Jenny.

While many patients complain of shortages, the senators who signed the letter talk about states being “flooded” with opioids.

“Pharmaceutical companies have irresponsibly flooded states with millions and millions of opioids pills – enough, in fact, for every adult in America to have their own bottle,” Sen. King said in a statement. “And the consequences are both clear and dire: As the number of pills has grown, so has the drug epidemic. By scaling back the overabundance of these opioids, the DEA can help directly stem the tide of addiction while still also ensuring that those who suffer from chronic pain have the medication they need.”

DEA Opioid Cuts Could Affect Terminally Ill Patients

By Pat Anson, Editor

Steep cuts in the production of opioid pain medication planned by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration could worsen drug shortages and affect pain patients receiving end-of-life hospice care.

“Yes, I think that’s absolutely possible. And very, very concerning,” says Judi Lund Person, VP of Regulatory and Compliance for the National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization.

The DEA announced earlier this week that it is reducing production quotas for almost every Schedule II opioid pain medication next year by 25 percent or more. The quota cuts include opioids such as hydrocodone, oxycodone, fentanyl, hydromorphone and morphine – many of which are used to give pain relief to patients in palliative and hospice care.

The DEA said the cuts are needed to prevent the diversion and abuse of opioids, and because opioid prescribing has been in decline for several years.

But Person says some patients in palliative care – who are generally disabled and chronically ill, but still living at home  – are already having trouble getting their opioid prescriptions filled.

“We’ve had patients who’ve had a lot of trouble finding a pharmacy that carries certain opioids,” she said

Person is worried that the DEA’s production cuts will also make it difficult for hospices to obtain opioids for terminally ill patients. Her organization, which represents about 4,000 hospice facilities in the United States, is still examining the possible impact of the opioid cuts.

“What does that do for patients at the end of life who need these drugs? That, I think, is one of our biggest questions,” Person told PNN.

“Living and working in the Washington area, the pressure is on so much around the opioid addiction crisis, and looking for any and all opportunities to see if we can correct that. It doesn’t surprise me in any way that this is happening. Now, what we’ll do about it and how we switch over to other drugs that will be available is a completely different question. I don’t know what we’ll do.”

Person says there are 1.4 million Medicare patients in hospice care and several million more receiving palliative care.

Many chronic pain patients who are not in palliative or hospice care say opioids are already hard to get, because many doctors are reluctant to prescribe them and some pharmacies claim they’re out of stock.

“I am really, really scared about my future and others. So many others are already suffering needlessly. How many more are going to be thrown under the bus?” asks Rich Martin, a Nevada pharmacist who was forced into early retirement by chronic back pain. “I take hydrocodone for my rescue doses, 5 times a day, and I almost always use them unless I am totally sedentary. I think hydrocodone is being reduced by 36 percent. 

“Opioids across the country have already been reduced or stopped parabolically downward. This whole quota thing could collapse to where there is indeed inadequate opioids for treatment of legitimate pain patients.  Then pharmacies may actually be telling the truth when they say they are out of opioids.”

The DEA says its opioid quotas are sufficient to provide “adequate and uninterrupted supply for legitimate medical need,” and could be adjusted if problems develop.

“DEA may revise a company’s quota at any time during the year if change is warranted due to increased sales or exports; new manufacturers entering the market; new product development; or product recalls,” the DEA said in a press release.

“This is a step in the right direction,” Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Illinois) said in an interview with WGN Radio. Durbin was among a group of senators that urged the DEA to lower the quota for opioids.

“Clearly there is more (opioids) than is necessary to alleviate pain. I’m the glad the DEA stepped up. It’s the first time.”

GAO Questions DEA’s Competency

Many Americans may not be aware of the significant role DEA plays in regulating the nation’s drug supplies. Drug manufacturers apply to the DEA every year to produce opioids and other controlled substances, and the agency determines how many – the quota – each drug maker can produce.

But in a recent series of highly critical reports, a congressional watchdog agency questioned the DEA’s competency in regulating pharmaceutical drugs.

In March 2015, the DEA was criticized in a lengthy report by the Government Accountability Office (GAO) for its inability to deal with drug shortages, a problem so serious it was called “a risk to public health.”

The GAO said that between 2001 and 2013, there were 87 “critical” shortages of controlled substances, over half of them pain relievers. There were also shortages of anti-anxiety medications, sedatives, and stimulants. 

“The shortcomings we have identified prevent DEA from having reasonable assurance that it is prepared to help ensure an adequate and uninterrupted supply of these drugs for legitimate medical need, and to avert or address future shortages. This approach to the management of an important process is untenable and poses a risk to public health,” the GAO report states.

A second GAO report in July 2015 faulted the DEA for heavy-handed tactics during pharmacy investigations. Many pharmacists said they were worried about being fined or having their licenses revoked, and blamed the DEA for poor communication and unclear rules. 

“In the absence of clear guidance from DEA some pharmacies may be inappropriately delaying or denying filling prescriptions for patients with legitimate medical needs,” the GAO report said. 

What has the DEA done in the last year to correct these problems? 

Of the 11 recommendations made by the GAO to improve the quota system and prevent drug shortages, the DEA has fully implemented only two of them.

One of the problems the DEA failed to address is the timeliness of its release of production quotas. Under guidelines set in 2006, the DEA is supposed to set quotas for controlled substances on or before May 1 of each year, to give drug manufacturers enough time to adjust their production schedules for the following year.

“DEA officials attributed this lack of compliance to inadequate staffing and noted that the agency’s workload with respect to quotas had increased substantially,” the GAO said in a report this summer.

“We could not confirm whether DEA’s lack of timeliness in establishing quotas had caused or exacerbated shortages because of concerns about the reliability of DEA’s data, among other things. However, by not promptly responding to manufacturers’ quota applications, we concluded that DEA may have hindered manufacturers’ ability to manufacture drugs that contain schedule II controlled substances that may help prevent or resolve a shortage.”

The quotas for 2017 were released on October 5 -- the 10th straight year that DEA has missed the quota deadline.