Scores of Deaths Blamed on Abuse of Painkiller
Patches, Some by Chewing Them
( photo )
This is an undated handout photo from a family
member showing Justin Knox,22. Knox joins a
growing list of people across the country who
have died abusing the prescription fentanyl pain
patch, a prescription-only product that is
intended for cancer patients and others with
chronic pain and is designed to dispense the
medicine slowly through the skin.
(Photo/HO/Family Member)
06-15-2006 6:26 PM
By JEFF DOUGLAS
ST. LOUIS -- Justin Knox bit down on the bitter-tasting patch, instantly
releasing three days' worth of a drug more powerful than morphine. He was dead
before he even got to the hospital.
The 22-year-old construction worker and addict was another victim in an
apparent surge in U.S. overdoses blamed on abuse of the fentanyl patch, a
prescription-only product that is intended for cancer patients and others with
chronic pain and is designed to dispense the medicine slowly through the skin.
"I cannot tell you the amount of people I've seen and the creative ways they
abuse this drug," said Dr. Scott Teitelbaum, director of the Florida Recovery
Center in Gainesville, Fla.
"Fentanyl has been abused for years. But recently there has been an increase.
I've seen more chewing, squeezing of the drug off the patch and shooting it
up."
Fentanyl, a synthetic narcotic, was introduced in the 1960s, but it was not
until the early 1990s that it became available in patch form.
Last year, the first generic versions of the patch hit the market.
At least seven deaths in Indiana and four in South Carolina since 2005 have
been blamed on abuse of the fentanyl patch, along with more than 100 deaths in
Florida in 2004. About a week after Knox's death in Farmington, Mo., in March,
a second man in the same county was prescribed the patch legally and died after
injecting himself with the gel that he had scraped from it.
Emergency-room visits by people misusing fentanyl shot up nearly 14-fold to
3,000 nationwide between 2000 and 2004, according to the U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services. The figures do not indicate how many of those ER
visits were because of the patch.(In recent months, more than 100 deaths have
been reported from Chicago and Detroit to Philadelphia among drug addicts who
overdosed on heroin mixed with fentanyl. And federal drug agents believe
fentanyl is being made in clandestine labs in Mexico and elsewhere.)
The first fentanyl patch was Duragesic, made by Johnson & Johnson. Sales more
than tripled from 2000 to 2004, according to the Pacific Law Center in La
Jolla, Calif. Worldwide sales were more than $2 billion in 2004, and half of
that was in the U.S., according to the J&J's Web site.
More than 5.7 million prescriptions were written in 2003 for the Duragesic
patch, according to IMS Health.
Mark Wolfe, spokesman for PriCari, the J&J unit that oversees Duragesic, said
the product comes with strong "black box" warnings about the dangers of abusing
Duragesic.
One theory is that addicts are turning to the fentanyl patch because of a
government crackdown on abuse of another powerful prescription painkiller,
OxyContin, or oxycodone.
"The abuse of oxycodone and the fear of litigation is enough to scare doctors
from prescribing it. Duragesic is in vogue, as we've seen over the last year
and a half and two years," said Dr. John Brandt, a chronic-pain specialist at
the University of Florida.
In Missouri, the man accused of illegally selling the fentanyl patch to Knox
has been charged with murder.
"The awareness is just not out there. I had never heard of this patch," said
Knox's mother, Rose Marler. "There's a new generation of drugs and people just
need to be aware."
___
On the Net:
Drug Abuse Warning Network:
http://www.dawninfo.samhsa.gov
Drug Enforcement Administration:
http://www.usdoj.gov/dea
... Little Tommy (to friend): "You know, Jane Smith CHEATS!"
... Friend: "Why do you say that?"
... Tommy: "Well, she said she'd show me hers if I showed
... her mine - but it turns out SHE HASN'T GOT ONE!"
Nann Bell - 26 Aug 2006 15:35 GMT
My PCP says he had a patient in the UP who licked his fentanyl patch to get
it faster - but that fellow had terminal cancer so he was in serious pain.
(this was all a discussion that started with me sounding off about the meth
labs making it hard for regular folks to buy pseudoephedrine!)

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