Addiction Specialists Wary of New Painkiller
By Barry Meier, November 15, 2013
Addiction experts protested loudly when the Food and Drug Administration approved a powerful new opioid painkiller last month, saying that it would set off a wave of abuse much as OxyContin did when it first appeared.
An F.D.A. panel had earlier voted, 11 to 2, against approval of the drug, Zohydro, in part because unlike current versions of OxyContin, it is not made in a formulation designed to deter abuse.
Now a new issue is being raised about Zohydro. The drug will be manufactured by the same company, Alkermes, that makes a popular medication called Vivitrol, used to treat patients addicted to painkillers or alcohol.
In addition, the company provides financial support to a leading professional group that represents substance abuse experts, the American Society of Addiction Medicine.
For some critics, the company’s multiple roles in the world of painkillers is troubling.
Dr. Gregory L. Jones, an addiction specialist in Louisville, Ky., said he had long been concerned about financial links between the group and the drug industry, adding that the Zohydro situation amplified those potential conflicts.
Dr. Stuart Gitlow, the current president of the American Society of Addiction Medicine, said he had been unaware until now of Alkermes’s involvement with Zohydro. Dr. Gitlow, who is affiliated with Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City, said that the group would seek more information from Alkermes about the situation and then decide what, if anything, to do next.
Officials of Alkermes appear to recognize the issue they face. In recent years, the company has been trying to increase sales of Vivitrol, a form of a drug called naltrexone, that is used to treat both alcoholism and opioid addiction.
In a statement, Rebecca Peterson, a spokeswoman for Alkermes, said the company was “evaluating its role with respect to Zohydro” as a result of the drug’s approval. She declined to elaborate.
The tie between Alkermes and Zohydro had not drawn attention because the company did not initially own the drug, nor was it apparently involved in the efforts to get it approved in the United States.
A small California-based company called Zogenix purchased the right to market Zohydro in the United States from another drug maker, Elan. Then a year later, in 2011, Alkermes bought a unit of Elan that included Zohydro, among other products, and inherited the existing agreement with Zogenix.
In their presentation to the F.D.A., officials of Zogenix said they would closely monitor the drug’s use for signs that it was being abused and quickly move to stop such problems. Agency officials said they had approved the drug to give doctors another long-acting opioid to use when treating patients with chronic pain.
A few days after the drug’s approval, Zogenix announced that it had signed an agreement with another company, Altus Formulation, under which Altus would develop a formulation of Zohydro that was less vulnerable to abuse than the one just approved.
The development of drug formulations that are less prone to abuse can take years and are not always successful. Currently, drugs like OxyContin are designed so their consistency changes when they are crushed, making them difficult to inject or snort.
Zogenix began running a clinical trial of Zohydro in 2010. In a statement, the company’s president, Dr. Stephen J. Farr, said that the F.D.A. only recently laid out guidelines for the types of features it would like to see in opioid formulations that deter abuse.
“Zogenix is fully engaged in efforts to bring an abuse-deterrent-form formulation of Zohydro,” to market, he said.
Dr. Andrew J. Kolodny, the chief medical officer of Phoenix House, which runs drug and alcohol treatment centers in 10 states, said he believed that the American Society of Addiction Medicine should not take money from a company whose product would most likely worsen this country’s drug abuse problem.
In addition, Dr. Kolodny, who is a member of the group, said that while Phoenix House will continue to use Vivitrol when appropriate to treat patients, Alkermes officials will find the door closed.
“Representative of Alkermes are not welcome,” he said.
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/11/16/business/addiction-specialists-wary-of-new-painkiller.html