A doctor’s dilemma: Using opioids to treat addiction

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National News

February 20, 2019 - 10:29 AM

A heroin user holds suboxone near where John Jay College of Criminal Justice students are interviewing heroin users as part of a project involving Bronx drug users, on August 8, 2017, in New York City. GETTY IMAGES/SPENCER PLATT/TNS

PHILADELPHIA — Doctors need no special training to prescribe the opioid pain pills widely blamed for fueling a national addiction crisis.

But prescribing the medicine considered the gold standard for addiction treatment is another story entirely.

Opioid-based medications that help curb cravings, prevent overdoses, and allow drug users to get through the day without the fear of painful withdrawal have been proven to help people achieve lasting recovery far more reliably than quitting without medical help.

But, doctors say, federal regulations surrounding these treatment medications — and the special physician training and monitoring required to dispense them — have deterred many of their colleagues from obtaining the license needed to prescribe the drug.

Just 3 percent of doctors in Pennsylvania and 4 percent of those in Philadelphia have the waiver needed to prescribe the treatment medicine buprenorphine, according to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. And the problem is worse in rural areas: Nearly 30 percent of rural Americans live in a county without a buprenorphine provider, according to new research from the Pew Charitable Trusts.

Methadone, the most heavily regulated opioid-based treatment drug, can only be dispensed at specially licensed clinics, and often requires users to visit daily for the drug and for counseling. Buprenorphine can be taken in one’s own home, and is available in pill form, as a longer-acting shot, and as the brand-name drug Suboxone, which combines buprenorphine with the overdose-reversal drug naloxone.

There are differences between the two opioid-based medicines, but both are longer-acting and don’t produce the peaks and troughs associated with short-term opioids, like heroin, making them useful for people in treatment.

Physicians who want to prescribe buprenorphine need a license commonly known as an x-waiver from the DEA and the U.S. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, after taking an eight-hour training course.

The American Society of Addiction Medicine’s eight-hour training course, one of several on offer on the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration’s website, identifies its “learning objectives” as teaching doctors how to apply for the waiver, to identify patients who’d benefit from buprenorphine and to recognize other illnesses associated with opioid addiction.

From there, a doctor can treat up to 30 patients in their first year with the license, 100 in their second year, and are capped at 275 in their third.

Another irony: These restrictions apply only to doctors prescribing these medications for a substance use disorder. There’s no special license required to prescribe methadone for pain. And though buprenorphine is not FDA-approved for pain, some providers are prescribing it off-label without an x-waiver.

The DEA’s local spokesman, Pat Trainor, said the x-waiver “allows doctors to help people to get medication-assisted treatment in their communities — and not have to go to a narcotic treatment program, so as to avoid the stigma of that,” he said, and added that primary care doctors not accustomed to treating addiction need training to do so.

But doctors who treat people with addiction say the regulations themselves create stigma, and discourage more doctors from seeing substance use disorder as a disease that they can treat.

“Doctors have basically been taught and raised and are functioning in a system where addiction is always someone else’s job,” said Priya Mammen, an emergency physician and public health advocate from South Philadelphia. “The regulations treat these medications as qualitatively different from any other medication we prescribe. It gives off the impression that addiction is a specific kind of illness — but from all the literature, all the data we know, it’s a chronic disease. But it’s not treated like that in the system.”

 

JEANMARIE Perrone, the director of the division of medical toxicology in the University of Pennsylvania’s emergency department, has worked to expand her system’s buprenorphine program.

She believes doctors should still get some kind of training before beginning to prescribe buprenorphine, and has helped implement classic behavioral incentives to get more doctors into training.

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