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Drugmakers Spent Millions Promoting Opioids To Patient Groups, Senate Report Says

OxyContin pills arranged for a photo at a pharmacy in Montpelier, Vt. in a photo taken in 2013.
OxyContin pills arranged for a photo at a pharmacy in Montpelier, Vt. in a photo taken in 2013.

Drug-makers gave millions of dollars to pain-treatment advocacy groups over a five-year period beginning in 2012, in effect promoting opioids to individuals most vulnerable to addiction, a new report released Monday by a U.S. Senator says.The 23-page report, put out by Missouri Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill, sheds light on the pharmaceutical industry's efforts to shape public opinion and to fuel demand for such lucrative and potentially addictive drugs as OxyContin, Fentanyl and Vicodin that have played a key role in the addiction crisis that has swept the U.S. in recent years, claiming hundreds of thousands of lives.Fueling an Epidemic: Exposing the Financial Ties Between Opioid Manufacturers and Third Party Advocacy Groups describes how the arrangement between pharmaceutical makers and advocacy groups "may have played a significant role in creating the necessary conditions for the U.S. opioid epidemic.""The pharmaceutical industry spent a generation downplaying the risks of opioid addiction and trying to expand their customer base for these incredibly dangerous medications and this report makes clear they made investments in third-party organizations that could further those goals," McCaskill said. "These financial relationships were insidious, lacked transparency, and are one of many factors that have resulted in arguably the most deadly drug epidemic in American history."The report follows a similar investigation in 2012 carried out by Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., and Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, that looked into financial ties between drug makers and medical providers who helped establish guidelines for prescribing opioids. That investigation was ultimately shelved."It looks pretty damning when these groups were pushing the message about how wonderful opioids are and they were being heavily funded, in the millions of dollars, by the manufacturers of those drugs," Lewis Nelson, a Rutgers University doctor and opioid expert says, according to The Center for Public Integrity.The report says that nearly all health advocacy groups accept funding from drug manufacturers, adding that "These financial relationships—and the lack of transparency surrounding them—have raised concerns regarding the information and initiatives patient advocacy organizations promote."The report cites the Journal of the American Medical Association as saying that 8 percent of such patient groups responding to one study "reported [that] pressure to conform their organizations' positions to the interests of industry funders is of concern."A single company, Purdue Pharma, the maker of OxyContin, funneled $4.7 million to advocacy groups over the five-year period, according to the report.Also mentioned are Depomed, which markets the narcotic Nucynta, the brand name of the opioid pain reliever tapentadol and three makers of fentanyl, a powerful and potentially addictive pain reliever: Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Mylan and Insys Therapeutics, whose CEO was charged in October for using bribes and kickbacks to promote unacceptable uses of the company's flagship fentanyl spray, Subsys.The companies gave more than $10 million between 2012 and 2017 to 14 advocacy groups and affiliated doctors, the report says.In that period, Insys gave $2.5 million to the U.S. Pain Foundation for one of the group's patient assistance programs, the report says.The U.S. Pain Foundation said "any funding we receive has never nor will it ever influence what we will do to help people with chronic pain," according to a statement published in The St. Louis Post Dispatch.The Associated Press writes: "The findings [in the report] could bolster hundreds of lawsuits that are aimed at holding opioid drugmakers responsible for helping fuel an epidemic blamed for the deaths of more than 340,000 Americans since 2000." Copyright 2018 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org/.