A Fentanyl Vaccine Is a Horrible Idea
/By Crystal Lindell
A few years ago, I saved a loved one’s life when he was overdosing on fentanyl.
His lips and fingertips were blue when I found him, and as I administered NARCAN (naloxone), all I could think at that moment was that if he was dead, I never got the chance to say good-bye.
It was one of the most traumatizing experiences of my life, and I’m forever grateful that my efforts to save him were successful.
Even with that experience, I’m here to tell you that a fentanyl vaccine is an absolutely horrible idea. And I pray that nobody I love ever takes it – even the man who’s life I saved.
This week, JAMA published an article about the current status of the fentanyl vaccine, which is in development.
In the article, Associate Managing Editor Kate Schweitzer interviews Collin Gage, a cofounder and chief executive officer of ARMR Sciences, which has begun early-phase human trials of a fentanyl vaccine in the Netherlands.
Schweitzer seems to think such a vaccine would be a net positive for the world.
"If proven safe and effective, it could become the first proactive pharmaceutical approach designed to prevent fentanyl overdose and, potentially, treat addiction," she writes.
However, as both a chronic pain sufferer and someone whose loved one struggled with fentanyl addiction, I’m here to tell you that this entire research project should be ended right now.
First and foremost, my biggest concern is that such a vaccine would be pushed onto people who do not want or need it, including pain patients.
I can already see doctors having a policy where they won’t prescribe opioids unless the patient agrees to receive the fentanyl vaccine. They’ll claim the policy is meant to protect patients, when in reality, it would only cause them more harm.
The article even points out what those harms could look like. Schweitzer quotes Kathryn Frietze, PhD, associate professor of molecular genetics and microbiology at the University of New Mexico, who is one of many researchers working to develop vaccines against drugs of abuse.
Doctors, according to Frietze, have expressed concern about how a vaccine could complicate medical care, given that prescription fentanyl is a widely used medication for acute pain control and anesthesia.
“Can they increase the fentanyl dose medically if needed, or is it going to completely eliminate fentanyl as an option?” Fritze asked.
Read that again. Do we really want to eliminate fentanyl as an option for pain control and anesthesia? This is a medication used in hospitals, usually on patients in severe trauma or undergoing surgery.
Do we really want a vaccine to make fentanyl ineffective for them?
Do we really want a vaccine that requires more fentanyl to be administered?
In practice, either scenario could be disastrous, especially in an emergency situation where an unconscious patient would be unable to explain to doctors that they had the fentanyl vaccine.
The thing about fentanyl is that you have no idea that you might need it someday. We don’t usually know when we’ll need anesthesia or acute pain control.
That is particularly relevant in this situation, because the article quotes multiple experts who seem excited about pushing a fentanyl vaccine onto high-risk groups, such as college students and young adults, who are experimenting with drugs. They may not be aware that the counterfeit pill they bought or got from a friend has a lethal dose of fentanyl.
“Overdose from fentanyl doesn’t just happen to people who are purposely taking fentanyl,” Frietze said. “People may be exposed without their knowledge.”
So they want to go to college campuses and give students a vaccine against a very valid pain medication, when they have no idea if they will ever need it?
Schweitzer says a vaccine that specifically targets fentanyl could still allow for the use of other analgesics, such as morphine and propofol.
As a pain patient, I’m skeptical about that. If a vaccine blocks the effects of one opioid, it may also dampen the effects of other ones.
The other major issue with a potential fentanyl vaccine is a phrase coined by Richard Cowan in 1986: “The Iron Law of Prohibition.” That essentially means that when law enforcement targets a specific drug, the potency of other prohibited substances increases.
Or, as Cowan said, "The harder the enforcement, the harder the drugs."
If you give everyone fentanyl vaccines, people will just find even stronger drugs to take. And those drugs will likely be more deadly. It’s no coincidence that illicit fentanyl arrived on the black market just as opioid pain medication became harder to get.
As such, a fentanyl vaccine could result in more overdose deaths, not less, as people seek substitute drugs that bypass the vaccine.
Gage’s response to that possibility is to call the fentanyl vaccine “a platform technology—one that we plan to adapt."
In other words, they will just make new vaccines for new drugs. But in practice, how long would it take to actually develop new ones? And how long would it take to get them to drug users, who are often difficult for the medical community to reach?
Trust me when I tell you that drug users and their dealers will move exponentially faster than any research and development team ever could.
In practice, the reason street fentanyl is so deadly is because it’s unregulated. Users don’t know how much they are taking or what is mixed in with it – and those two things make it more likely that the drug will cause an overdose.
The solution then is to offer drug users a regulated supply, which is what methadone treatment is. In a perfect world, if they really wanted to help fentanyl users, these researchers would be working to make methadone treatment more accessible.
Instead, they’d rather make it so patients can’t use one of the most effective pain and anesthesia medications on the market, while pushing them onto harder or less effective drugs.
It’s a bad idea, and I hope these researchers see the error of their ways before it’s too late.
