Fentanyl Linked to 94% of Overdose Deaths in Massachusetts

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

There’s good and bad news in the latest report on overdose deaths in Massachusetts. State health officials say drug deaths were down slightly in the first nine months of 2022, compared to the same period last year. But deaths involving fentanyl – most likely illicit fentanyl -- rose to 94% of opioid-related overdoses, a record high.

Massachusetts was one of the first states in the U.S. to expand the use of toxicology tests to look for the presence of certain drugs involved in opioid overdoses, instead of just relying on death certificates and coroner reports. That makes its overdose data more accurate.

In the first nine months of 2022, there were 1,340 confirmed opioid-related overdose deaths in Massachusetts, and officials expect that to reach about 1,696 deaths by the end of the year. That’s 25 fewer deaths than in 2021, a decrease of 1.5 percent.

Nationally, drug overdose deaths also appear to be slowing. The CDC estimates there were 107,735 U.S. overdose deaths in the 12-month period ending in July 2022, down from over 110,000 deaths in the 12-month period that ended in March, 2022. Illicit fentanyl, a synthetic opioid about 50 to 100 times more potent than morphine, is involved in the vast majority of those deaths.

Deaths in Massachusetts involving a fentanyl have been rising for over a decade, from nearly 42% of opioid-related overdoses in 2014 to 94% this year. Over that same period, deaths involving prescription opioids such as oxycodone and hydrocodone have steadily declined from about 35% to 11% of overdoses in 2022.

More people are now dying in Massachusetts after ingesting fentanyl, cocaine, alcohol or benzodiazepines such as Xanax than from pain medication. Deaths linked to opioid medication fell by 30% in just one year, which coincides with a steep decline in prescriptions in Massachusetts over the past decade.   

Drugs Involved in Massachusetts Opioid-Related Overdose Deaths

Massachusetts Department of Public Health

“Every life lost to opioid overdose is its own tragedy,” Public Health Commissioner Margret Cooke said in a statement. “With this report, we are encouraged by the decrease, however modest, in opioid-related overdose deaths in Massachusetts so far this year. We will continue to build on our data-driven and equity-based public health approach as we address the impacts of the opioid epidemic and the COVID-19 pandemic, especially among vulnerable populations.”

Health officials say the illicit drug supply in Massachusetts is “heavily contaminated” with illicit fentanyl, which is frequently used in the manufacture of counterfeit medication sold on the street.

Pharmaceutical fentanyl is used as a surgical analgesic and in patches and lozenges to treat severe pain, but only small amounts are diverted for abuse. The DEA estimates that only 0.01% of prescription fentanyl is diverted for use by someone it was not intended for.

It's important to note that the presence of a drug found in a toxicology screen doesn’t mean it was the cause of someone’s death. Multiples substances are frequently involved in opioid overdoses, and the official cause of death is a clinical decision made by coroners and medical examiners.

Toxicology tests alone also don’t reveal if a prescribed drug was intended for the decedent, or if it was bought, stolen or borrowed by them. An earlier study of drug deaths in Massachusetts found that only 1.3% of overdose victims had a prescription for the opioid medication involved in their deaths.

The vast majority of patients prescribed opioids use them responsibly and don’t go doctor shopping. The Massachusetts Department of Public Health estimates that only 0.6% of patients who were prescribed an opioid this year had an “activity of concern,” such as getting prescriptions from multiple providers or having them filled at multiple pharmacies.

Second Patient Dies After DEA’s Suspension of Doctor’s License   

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

A second chronic pain patient has died as a result of the DEA’s suspension of a California doctor’s license to prescribe opioids pain medication. 42-year Jessica Fujimaki died Saturday, December 10th at her home in Arizona, apparently due to complications caused by opioid withdrawal.

Jessica lived with Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome (EDS), arachnoiditis, stenosis and other chronic conditions that cause severe, intractable pain and left her bedridden.

In the past year, she found relief through injections of the opioid hydromorphone every two hours, which allowed her to walk, have some quality of life, and take care of her husband and two children.   

That came crashing to an end in early November, when she learned that her pain specialist, Dr. David Bockoff, had his license to prescribe opioids and other controlled substances suspended by the DEA.

“She was frightened, because she knew what was going to happen to her if she didn’t have that medication,” said Tad Fujimaki, Jessica’s husband. “There’s no way she could live without it.”

The Fujimakis were unable to find another doctor in Arizona willing to treat Jessica, and her health steadily deteriorated as opioid withdrawal set in.

In desperation, they made two trips to Mexico to purchase oral opioids there, but were uncertain of the quality of medications they received.

JESSICA FUJIMAKI

A last-minute prescription for injectable hydromorphone from an out-of-state doctor failed to stop her cascading health problems. Her exact cause of death has yet to be determined, pending an autopsy.

Had the treatment that Jessica received from Dr. Bockoff continued, Tad believes his wife would still be alive today. He blames the DEA for her death.   

“Absolutely. DEA, government, all of them. If they didn’t stop the medication, if Jessica was still getting medication from Dr. Bockoff, this would have never happened,” he told PNN.

Like many patients with EDS, Jessica wasn’t diagnosed with the genetic connective tissue disease until well into adulthood. In 2020, when the Fujimakis lived in Hawaii, she had an epidural steroid injection for leg pain that made her condition far worse. Seeking better treatment, the family moved to the mainland.

“The one mistake we made was to move to Arizona,” said Tad, explaining they could find no doctors to treat Jessica near their Phoenix home.  

“Because she was too complicated a patient. They knew they can’t prescribe hydromorphone,” he said. “If we knew the state of Arizona was an anti-opioid state, then we probably wouldn’t have moved from Hawaii to Arizona. We’d have picked a different state.”

Like many other “opioid refugees” on high doses, Jessica searched for doctors out-of-state, eventually finding Bockoff, who has practiced medicine for over 50 years in California without any record of disciplinary action or complaints.

“I have no comment. A very unfortunate tragedy,” Bockoff replied in an email when asked about Jessica’s death.  

THE FUJIMAKI FAMILY

Another Bockoff patient who lived with intractable pain ran out of medication and died one week after the license suspension. Danny Elliott and his wife Gretchen were so distraught over his inability to find another doctor and get opioid treatment that they committed suicide in their Georgia home.

‘Imminent Danger to Public Health’

Why the DEA suspended Bockoff’s license is still not entirely clear. DEA agents searched his office in September, 2021 and confiscated the medical records of 240 patients, which they later returned.

Although a DEA notice of the suspension – signed by DEA administrator Anne Milgram -- states that Bockoff posed “an imminent danger to the public health,” his license was not suspended until 14 months after the initial search, when he was accused of violating the Controlled Substances Act when treating five patients.

Those allegations primarily deal with improper record-keeping and prescribing high doses of opioids that could potentially be diverted or abused. But there is no indication that any harm was caused to the five patients while under Dr. Bockoff’s care, or that they sold or abused the opioids he prescribed.

While Bockoff appeals his suspension, 11 of his patients have hired a lawyer and tried – unsuccessfully so far -- to sign on as intervenors, so they could participate in DEA hearings on the case. One of them was Jessica Fujimaki.

“With the suspension of Dr. Bockoffs license, I am left without care again. It took over a year to find the protocol that work for me and allowed me to have some quality of life,” Jessica wrote in a statement to the DEA.

“I was very fortunate to find Dr. David Bockoff, who accepted me as his patient and has been able to treat me in accordance with the treatment protocol that works for me. This treatment protocol changed my life and gave me hope,” she wrote.

“I am able to walk most days unless I am in a huge flare. Without Dr. Bockoff's care and prescribed medication, I would be bedbound, unable to walk, unable to function, and certainly unable to care for my children.”

A DEA administrative law judge declined to let Jessica and the other patients participate in a pretrial conference on November 28, but has not officially rejected or approved their motion to intervene in future hearings. The patients are considering other legal avenues.

Whatever happens, it’s not likely to happen in time to prevent future tragedies. Under DEA rules, doctors have 30 days to appeal their license suspensions. Legal experts say the process can then take months or years to resolve – too long for patients like Jessica and Danny Elliott, who suffered needlessly and didn’t have time to wait.

There Is Another Drug Reform Bill the Senate Must Pass

By Michael C. Barnes, Guest Columnist

After last month’s midterm elections, the U.S. Senate passed the Medical Marijuana and Cannabidiol Expansion Research Act. The House had passed the bill in April, and President Biden signed it into law on December 2. The new law has been described as “modest” because it mostly facilitates research on marijuana and cannabidiol to support the development of medications for approval by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

The law also eliminates a longstanding regulatory roadblock that has prevented marijuana research; hindered the development of marijuana-derived, FDA-approved medications; and led to 37 state-regulated markets for marijuana products that do not meet federal consistency, purity, and potency standards. New research can be expected to yield marijuana-derived medications that the FDA can approve.

There is another regulatory burden that the Senate must eliminate before the end of this year. This change in federal law would also be modest, but it would facilitate access to treatment for opioid use disorder (OUD), which is essential amid the nationwide fentanyl poisoning crisis. S. 3257 would expand the time health care providers can hold long-acting, injectable buprenorphine (an FDA-approved medication for OUD) from 14 days to 60 days. It’s that simple. But like the new marijuana research law, the modest change will make a significant difference.

In the 12 months that ended June 30, 2022, 102,842 people died of a drug poisoning. Of those, 69,150 involved synthetic opioids, predominantly illegal fentanyl. Facilitating access to evidence-based treatment for OUD is more important now than ever. Changing the law cannot wait until the next Congress gets up and running.

S.3257 would amend the Controlled Substances Act, which currently requires that a health care provider administer injectable buprenorphine OUD medication to the patient named on the prescription within 14 days after the medication was delivered to the provider. The supposed purpose of the 14-day limit is to prevent the diversion of the medication to the illicit market.

But in 2020, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) reported that “all of the provider groups GAO spoke with said that diversion of injectable … buprenorphine is unlikely, and representatives from three of the six provider groups said that the design of these formulations reduce opportunities for diversion due to how they are administered.”

For patients and providers, the 14-day limit is too short considering the coordination required to facilitate injectable buprenorphine prescribing, insurance coverage and payment, delivery and receipt, and appointment scheduling and attendance. Sixty days are necessary to ensure that medication administration may take place at a time when the patient, provider, and medication are available.

Additionally, the 14-day limit wastes valuable health care resources and places patients’ recovery and lives at risk. For example, if an insured patient is not able to attend a medical appointment on or before the 14th day after the injectable buprenorphine was delivered to his or her provider, the medication must be disposed of.

It is unlikely that an insurer would pay for a replacement product, and it is common for patients not to be able to pay for medications out of pocket. As a result, a patient may be forced to go without a week or months’ worth of medication for OUD. This situation can put the patient at risk for a recurrence of OUD symptoms, active substance use, poisoning by illicit substance, and death.

In June, the House of Representatives passed H.R. 7666 with broad bipartisan support. Section 264 of H.R. 7666 contains a provision expanding the 14-day limit to 60 days.

In passing the marijuana research act, the Senate proved itself willing and capable of enacting modest yet meaningful drug reforms during its lame-duck session. To prevent drug poisonings and avoid wasting lifesaving medications, the Senate must do so again by expanding the 14-day limit to 60 days.

Michael C. Barnes is the managing attorney for Sequel Health Law. He serves as counsel to Aimed Alliance, a not-for-profit health policy organization.

The goal of Aimed Alliance is to create a society in which consumers can make informed and individually appropriate decisions about their health care, without those decisions being overridden by third parties.

DEA Finalizes Cuts in 2023 Opioid Supply

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration has finalized plans to further reduce the supply of oxycodone, hydrocodone and other commonly prescribed opioids by about 5 percent in 2023, ignoring complaints from patients and healthcare providers that a seventh consecutive year of cuts in opioid production would cause shortages and interfere with the treatment of pain patients.

In a notice published in the Federal Register, DEA said the reduced supply of opioids in 2023 would be “sufficient to meet all legitimate needs.”  The agency has broad legal authority under the Controlled Substances Act (CSA) to establish annual production quotas for drug manufacturers, based on estimated medical, scientific and research needs.  

The 5% production cut in 2023 for Schedule II opioids is not as steep as in prior years, but continues a trend that began a decade ago. Since their peak in 2013, DEA production quotas have fallen by 65% for oxycodone and 73% for hydrocodone.

It’s hard to find any evidence that reducing the opioid supply prevents overdoses. Prescription opioid use has fallen by nearly 50 percent in recent years, but drug deaths have climbed to record levels, fueled primarily by street drugs made with illicit fentanyl.

‘You’re Just Going to Kill People’

Over 350 people and organizations commented on the DEA’s new quotas during a 30-day public comment period that ended in mid-November. Many fear that further cuts in the opioid supply will lead to more suffering and suicides due to untreated pain.

“The DEA should not impose further reduction in the supply of Rx opioids for 2023. There is no correlation between prescriptions and diversion. All the street drugs out there come from Mexico by way of China, NOT a pharmacy,” wrote Anne Hoch. “The DEA are acting as doctors and determining how a doctor does his or her job. The government has to get out of healthcare and respect patient privacy again.”

“Stop reducing production of opioids. There already is a large shortage of pain meds. Why in the world are you reducing AGAIN??! Stop torturing Americans with your disastrous policies. It's quite clear that access to prescription opioids is a problem, so I'm not at all sure what you think you'll gain from reducing production -- you're just going to kill people,” wrote Amber Bullington.

Several people also pointed out that the CDC recently updated its opioid guideline to emphasize there is no hard limit on doses and to give doctors more flexibility in prescribing opioids.

“I believe that the DEA must take into consideration these revised Guidelines, because physicians will no longer be constrained to any arbitrary, hard and fast limit. More, rather than less, opioid daily dosages could be prescribed to certain individual patients who have high impact, intractable pain,” said an anonymous poster.

But the DEA said it would proceed as planned and take a wait-and-see approach to the revised guideline before making any changes to its aggregate production quotas (APQ).

“DEA will consider the impact of CDC's revised guidelines over time, in determining whether DEA may need to publish a revision to the currently proposed APQ values during the 2023 calendar year, when there is sufficient data to provide an understanding of the impact of the guidelines on the actual prescribing as practitioners seek to implement this guidance,” wrote DEA Administrator Anne Milgram, a former Attorney General of New Jersey who has no experience in medicine.

“In addition, DEA's regulations do not impose a maximum limit on the amount of medication that may be prescribed on a single prescription. DEA has consistently emphasized and supported the authority of individual practitioners under the CSA to administer, dispense, and prescribe controlled substances for the legitimate treatment of pain within acceptable medical standards.” 

That comment about no “maximum limit” on prescriptions and the DEA supporting the “authority of individual practitioners” would come as a surprise to many doctors. For years, DEA task forces have targeted doctors who prescribe high doses of opioids deemed to be “outside the usual course of professional practice.” 

Last month the agency suspended the DEA license of Dr. David Bockoff, a California doctor who was treating 240 pain patients, including some from out-of-state who need high doses but were unable to find a local provider. Although Bockoff has practiced medicine for 53 years and has no record of any disciplinary action or complaints with the state medical board, the DEA alleged that he was “an imminent threat” to public safety. Milgram herself issued the order suspending Bockoff’s license to prescribe opioids and other controlled substances.

Within a week of the suspension, a distraught high-dose patient and his wife died in a double suicide in Georgia because he was unable to find another doctor willing to treat his pain. PNN has learned of a second Bockoff patient who died this past weekend, apparently from complications caused by opioid withdrawal. 

Sickle Cell Patients Make Difficult Choices About Fertility

By Farah Yousry, Kaiser Health News  

Teonna Woolford has always wanted six kids. Why six?

“I don’t know where that number came from. I just felt like four wasn’t enough,” said Woolford, a Baltimore resident. “Six is a good number.”

Woolford, 31, was born with sickle cell disease. The genetic disorder causes blood cells to become misshapen, which makes it harder for blood to carry oxygen and flow throughout the body. This can lead to strokes, organ damage, and frequent bouts of excruciating pain.

Sickle cell disease affects an estimated 100,000 people in the U.S., and the vast majority of them are Black. Federal and charitable dollars dedicated to fighting sickle cell disease pale in comparison to what is spent to combat other, less common diseases that mostly affect white patients.

Physicians and researchers said the disease is a stark example of the health inequities that pervade the U.S. health system. A poignant expression of this, patient advocates said, is the silence around the impact that sickle cell disease has on fertility and the lack of reproductive and sexual health care for the young people living with the complex disease.

Woolford’s sickle cell complications have run the gamut. By the time she was 15, her hip joints had become so damaged that she had to have both hips replaced. She depended on frequent blood transfusions to reduce pain episodes and vascular damage, and her liver was failing.

“So many complications, infections, hospitalizations, and so by the time I graduated high school, I just felt defeated [and] depressed,” said Woolford, speaking from a hospital bed in Baltimore.

She had experienced a sickle cell pain crisis a few days earlier and was receiving pain medication and intravenous fluids.

In her late teens, Woolford sought out a bone marrow transplant, a treatment that enables the sickle-shaped cells in the patient’s body to be replaced with healthy cells from a stem cell donor. The procedure comes with risks, and not everyone is eligible. It also relies on finding a compatible donor. But if it works, it can free a person from sickle cell disease forever.

Teonna Woolford

‘You’re Probably Already Infertile’

Woolford couldn’t find a perfect match, so she enrolled in a clinical trial in which doctors could use a “half-matched” donor. As part of the bone marrow transplant, patients first receive chemotherapy, which can impair or eliminate fertility. Woolford hesitated. After all, her ideal family included six children.

When she told her doctor about her worry, his response crushed her: “This doctor, he looked at me, and he was like, ‘Well, I’ll be honest, with all the complications you’ve already had from sickle cell, I don’t know why you’re even worried about this process making you infertile because you’re probably already infertile.’”

Even if patients don’t have the transplant, sickle cell disease can damage their bodies in ways that can affect their ability to have children, according to Dr. Leena Nahata, a pediatric endocrinologist at Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Ohio.

For women, chronic inflammation and the sickling of blood cells in the ovaries can make getting pregnant harder. For men, sickled blood can jam inside the blood vessels of the penis, causing painful, unwanted erections that last for hours. This condition, called priapism, can damage sexual function and decrease sperm count. And it’s not just the disease. Researchers are evaluating how some widely used treatments may affect fertility — for example, by decreasing sperm count.

“It remains unclear how that translates directly to fertility outcomes but at least raises the concern that this may be an issue,” Nahata said. Even more concerning to Nahata were the results of a small study, which she co-authored, that showed some patients were unaware of the many fertility risks related to sickle cell disease.

Woolford said she was 19 and shocked when her doctor told her she was probably already infertile. But no one could be sure, so she held out hope that she might still undergo a procedure to preserve her fertility before having the chemotherapy required for the bone marrow transplant.

From extensive research, she learned that egg freezing could cost more than $10,000 and that her insurance wouldn’t cover it. She couldn’t afford to do it on her own. Woolford wondered whether she could find another way to pay for egg freezing. “So I started looking into financial resources,” she said. “And I saw all these foundations [that] give away grants. But you had to have a diagnosis of cancer.”

In the end, Woolford had the transplant without freezing her eggs. She said she felt that being cured would “be a fair trade-off to give up my dream of biological children.”

Unfortunately, the partial-match transplant did not work. Woolford’s body rejected it.

“So, here I am,” she said. “I am 30, still have sickle cell disease, and I’m infertile.”

Fertility Preservation and Reproductive Justice

A grim thought sometimes pops into Woolford’s mind: If she had cancer instead of sickle cell disease, her dreams of having biological children might still come true.

The first description of sickle cell disease in medical literature was published over a century ago. Because most sickle cell patients in the U.S. were Black, it quickly became labeled as a “Black disease.” And with that came a legacy of systemic racism that still affects patients today.

Black patients tend to have less social capital and fewer resources, said Dr. Lydia Pecker, a sickle cell disease researcher and an assistant professor of medicine at Johns Hopkins University. For fertility treatment, the resources available to cancer patients differ starkly from those available to sickle cell patients.

“There are any number of foundations, large and small, that help support and pay for fertility preservation for people with cancer,” Pecker said. “Those foundations actually work with fertility preservation centers to negotiate lower rates for affected people.”

Clear clinical guidelines state that children who have cancer and are going through chemotherapy should be referred for fertility preservation. Children with sickle cell disease going through transplants are exposed to chemotherapy, too, “but we don’t really have guidelines like that yet for people with sickle cell disease,” Pecker said.

It’s not a perfect comparison, she added, because the kinds of chemotherapy drugs used in pediatric cancer are different from the chemotherapies used in sickle cell treatment. But fertility preservation can be crucial when there is any risk of treatment-associated fertility impairment, Pecker said. Without clear and widely adopted clinical guidelines, sickle cell patients may not be referred to appropriate care.

Pecker said current medical practice forces sickle cell patients to make a difficult choice. “You can have treatment or you can have fertility,” she said. But in cancer care, she said, the thought is: You can have treatment and you can have fertility.

In the U.S., health insurance coverage for fertility preservation and treatment is not guaranteed and varies from state to state. Only 12 states have laws that mandate fertility preservation coverage for patients who undergo treatments that could imperil their ability to have biological children — usually referred to as iatrogenic treatments — like chemotherapy or radiation.

After Woolford’s transplant failed, the disease continued its assault on her body. And Woolford has had to come to terms with the impossibility of ever having a biological child. She launched a nonprofit, the Sickle Cell Reproductive Health Education Directive, to raise awareness of fertility issues at medical conferences and among patients. A future goal is to provide financial grants to sickle cell patients struggling to pay for fertility preservation and treatments.

Most days, Woolford finds the work empowering. On other days, she admitted, it reminds her of the bleak reality that she will probably never conceive a child.

“It’s really hard because I don’t think a lot of people realize that I’m fighting for something that I didn’t have access to,” she said.

At this point, she said, it’s no longer a medical justice fight. It’s a reproductive justice one.

Reporting for this story was supported by the USC Annenberg Center for Health Journalism’s Impact Fund for Reporting on Health Equity and Health Systems. It was produced in partnership with Side Effects Public Media, WFYI, and Kaiser Health News.

Persistent Pain Worsens Physical Function and Mental Health in Seniors

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

Having persistent pain in your senior years is very common and contributes to declines in physical function and mental health, according to large new study that calls for more proactive treatment of pain in older adults.

“The findings from this study point to the importance of access to effective treatment for persistent pain in older adults and the need for additional research in chronic pain to optimize quality of life,” said lead author Christine Ritchie, MD, Director of the Mongan Institute Center for Aging and Serious Illness at Massachusetts General Hospital.

Ritchie and her colleagues analyzed health data for nearly 5,600 Medicare beneficiaries aged 65 and older who participated in the National Health Aging Trends Study from 2011 to 2019. Nearly 39% of participants reported having “persistent pain” and almost 28% had “intermittent pain.”  Only about a third of older adults (33.5%) reported having no “bothersome pain.”

Researchers found that seniors with persistent pain were more likely to report depression and anxiety, and to have three or more comorbid conditions such as a heart attack, stroke or cancer than those with intermittent or no pain. They were also more likely to have lower scores for mood and self-care activities such as eating, hygiene and dressing.

Perhaps the only good news is that differences were not found in cognitive impairment or dementia between those with and without persistent pain.

“This study is the first to include a representative sample of older Americans that demonstrates meaningful declines in physical function and well-being among those with persistent pain,” researchers reported in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

“Given the high prevalence of persistent pain and its negative effects on both function and well-being, domains of the lived experience highly valued by older adults, it is incumbent on clinicians to prioritize strategies to effectively address their persistent pain.”

The researchers said many older adults lack access to effective nonpharmacological therapies and receive little guidance from primary care physicians about pain treatments.

Participants with persistent pain were more likely to be female, low-income, have limited education, and to be living alone – findings that mirror those of a 2020 study that found less-educated, working class Americans had higher rates of pain, social isolation, drug abuse, disability and suicide.  

A recent study in the UK found that having chronic pain in middle age significantly raises the chances of having pain and poor overall health in your senior years.

Hypermobility Linked to Depression and Anxiety at Young Age

By Madora Pennington, PNN Columnist

The teenage years are difficult for almost everyone, but even more so for teens with hypermobile joints, a condition known as hypermobility. Their joints have an excess range of motion, and some can literally bend their arms, legs and fingers backward.

Jess — who asked that we not use her last name — had always noticed she was extremely flexible. By the time she was a teenager, Jess had crushing fatigue and anxiety. She obsessed over her grades like a perfectionist and developed an eating disorder. Her terrible anxiety caused her to self-medicate, as she did all she could to keep up with her peers.

Eventually, it all became too much. Jess had to leave high school and finish her degree through proficiency testing. Not until age 19 was she finally diagnosed with Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome (EDS), a disease that weakens connective tissue in the joints and causes hypermobility.

Hypermobility in early life is normal. All babies and children are highly flexible, which most eventually outgrow. But for some children, hypermobility is permanent. Excessively loose joints are a feature common to many inherited disorders like EDS, wherein the body cannot make connective tissue that is stable and strong. In essence, the "glue" holding their bodies together is flawed and weak.

Extremely flexible people like Jess may be seen by their peers as having interesting or cool skills, like doing contortionist tricks or excelling in yoga. But hypermobility is a severe health problem that can lead to mental health issues.

"Hypermobility affects one in four people in the UK. Like other musculoskeletal conditions, it can have a profound and far-reaching impact on life, causing daily pain, fatigue and often disrupted sleep," says Dr. Neha Issar-Brown, Director of Research and Health Intelligence at the UK-based charity Versus Arthritis. "Previous studies in adults have shown that you are more likely to suffer from anxiety if you have hypermobility, and that the daily toll of painful symptoms can lead to depression.”

A new study in BMJ Open found a similar link in adolescents. To see if there is an association between hypermobility, anxiety and depression in late adolescence, researchers at Brighton and Sussex Medical School evaluated over 14,000 teens with joint hypermobility.

At age 14, their hypermobility was scored, which is done by measuring the degree to which various joints hyperextend or bend past the point where they should. Then, at age 18, the participants answered surveys about depression and anxiety. Pain, a common complication of hypermobility, was also taken into account. The participants' heart rates were also studied.

"Many psychiatric problems, including depression and anxiety, start before the age of 25. It is therefore important to identify the factors that may increase the risk for these disorders. Being aware of the link between hypermobility and depression and anxiety means that we can work on developing appropriate and effective treatments," said lead author Dr. Jessica Eccles, Department of Neuroscience, Brighton and Sussex Medical School.

Eccles and her colleagues found that young people with joint hypermobility were more likely to have depression and anxiety, and their psychiatric symptoms were also more severe. Joint hypermobility was more common in females than males, but it was only among males that hypermobility increased the risk for depression.

"This study has highlighted the need for more targeted and bespoke support for hypermobile teenagers, particularly girls," says Lea Milligan, CEO of the UK-based advocacy organization MK Mental Health Research. "The findings don't just show the need for support for this group of individuals, but also demonstrate the importance of research that takes a whole mind, body brain approach to health and uses longitudinal studies to improve our understanding of which demographics are at higher risk of depression and anxiety.”

Why hypermobile people suffer from more psychopathologies may be due to a dysregulation of the nervous system called dysautonomia, which is very common among those with loose joints. Their poorly regulated nervous systems cause a rapid increase in heart rate when they rise to stand, when it should remain constant. This inability of the body to maintain a smooth and consistent heart rate when posture changes has also been associated with anxiety.

Rapid heart rates and poor cardiovascular regulation also occur when someone has anxiety and depression. The higher a person's resting heart rate, the more psychological symptoms tend to follow. Those with depression tend to have different skin temperatures, breathing rates, and a lower variability in heart rate.

Complaints from UK parents with hypermobile children motivated this study. They encountered healthcare providers that were ignorant of the complications and challenges of hypermobility and dismissed their concerns. More awareness and education are needed to help these families, and this study is a step in that direction.

Madora Pennington is the author of the blog LessFlexible.com about her life with Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome. She graduated from UC Berkeley with minors in Journalism and Disability Studies. 

Employers Use Co-Pay Assistance Programs for Costly ‘Nonessential’ Drugs

By Julie Appleby, Kaiser Health News

Anna Sutton was shocked when she received a letter from her husband’s job-based health plan stating that Humira, an expensive drug used to treat her daughter’s juvenile arthritis, was now on a long list of medications considered “nonessential benefits.”

The July 2021 letter said the family could either participate in a new effort overseen by a company called SaveOnSP and get the drug free of charge or be saddled with a monthly copayment that could top $1,000.

“It really gave us no choice,” said Sutton, of Woodinville, Washington. She added that “every single FDA-approved medication for juvenile arthritis” was on the list of nonessential benefits.

Sutton had unwittingly become part of a strategy that employers are using to deal with the high cost of drugs prescribed to treat conditions such as arthritis, psoriasis, cancer, and hemophilia.

Those employers are tapping into dollars provided through programs they have previously criticized: patient financial assistance initiatives set up by drugmakers, which some benefit managers have complained encourage patients to stay on expensive brand-name drugs when less expensive options might be available.

Now, though, employers, or the vendors and insurers they hire specifically to oversee such efforts, are seeking that money to offset their own costs. Drugmakers object, saying the money was intended primarily for patients. But some benefit brokers and companies like SaveOnSP say they can help trim employers’ spending on insurance — which, they say, could be the difference between an employer offering coverage to workers or not.

It’s the latest twist in a long-running dispute between the drug industry and insurers over which group is more to blame for rising costs to patients. And patients are, again, caught in the middle.

Patient advocates say the term “nonessential” stresses patients out even though it doesn’t mean the drugs — often called “specialty” drugs because of their high prices or the way they are made — are unnecessary.

Some advocates fear the new strategies could be “a way to weed out those with costly health care needs,” said Rachel Klein, deputy executive director of the AIDS Institute, a nonprofit advocacy group. Workers who rely on the drugs may feel pressured to change insurers or jobs, Klein said.

Gaming the System to Save Money

Two versions of the new strategy are in play. Both are used mainly by self-insured employers that hire vendors, like SaveOnSP, which then work with the employers’ pharmacy benefit managers, such as Express Scripts/Cigna, to implement the strategy. There are also smaller vendors, like SHARx and Payer Matrix, some of which work directly with employers.

In one approach, insurers or employers continue to cover the drugs but designate them as “nonessential,” which allows the health plans to bypass annual limits set by the Affordable Care Act on how much patients can pay in out-of-pocket costs for drugs. The employer or hired vendor then raises the copay required of the worker, often sharply, but offers to substantially cut or eliminate that copay if the patient participates in the new effort.

Workers who agree enroll in drugmaker financial assistance programs meant to cover the drug copays, and the vendor monitoring the effort aims to capture the maximum amount the drugmaker provides annually, according to a lawsuit filed in May by drugmaker Johnson & Johnson against SaveOnSP, which is based in Elma, New York.

The employer must still cover part of the cost of the drug, but the amount is reduced by the amount of copay assistance that is accessed. That assistance can vary widely and be as much as $20,000 a year for some drugs.

In the other approach, employers don’t bother naming drugs nonessential; they simply drop coverage for specific drugs or classes of drugs. Then, the outside vendor helps patients provide the financial and other information needed to apply for free medication from drugmakers through charity programs intended for uninsured patients.

“We’re seeing it in every state at this point,” said Becky Burns, chief operating officer and chief financial officer at the Bleeding and Clotting Disorders Institute in Peoria, Illinois, a federally funded hemophilia treatment center.

The strategies are mostly being used in self-insured employer health plans, which are governed by federal laws that give broad flexibility to employers in designing health benefits.

Still, some patient advocates say these programs can lead to delays for patients in accessing medications while applications are processed — and sometimes unexpected bills for consumers.

“We have patients get billed after they max out their assistance,” said Kollet Koulianos, vice president of payer relations at the National Hemophilia Foundation. Once she gets involved, vendors often claim the bills were sent in error, she said.

Even though only about 2% of the workforce needs the drugs, which can cost thousands of dollars a dose, they can lead to a hefty financial liability for self-insured employers, said Drew Mann, a benefits consultant in Knoxville, Tennessee, whose clientele includes employers that use variations of these programs.

Before employer health plans took advantage of such assistance, patients often signed up for these programs on their own, receiving coupons that covered their share of the drug’s cost. In that circumstance, drugmakers often paid less than they do under the new employer schemes because a patient’s out-of-pocket costs were capped at lower amounts.

Brokers and the CEOs of firms offering the new programs say that in most cases patients continue to get their drugs, often with little or no out-of-pocket costs.

If workers do not qualify for charity because their income is too high, or for another reason, the employer might make an exception and pay the claim or look for an alternative solution, Mann said. Patient groups noted that some specialty drugs may not have any alternatives.

Patients Caught in the Middle  

How this practice will play out in the long run remains uncertain. Drugmakers offer both copay assistance and charity care in part because they know many patients, even those with insurance, cannot afford their products. The programs are also good public relations and a tax write-off. But the new emphasis by some employers on maximizing the amount they or their insurers can collect from the programs could cause some drugmakers to take issue with the new strategies or even reconsider their programs.

“Even though our client, like most manufacturers, provides billions in discounts and rebates to health insurers as part of their negotiations, the insurers also want this additional pool of funds, which is meant to help people who can’t meet the copay,” said Harry Sandick, a lawyer representing J&J.

J&J’s lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in New Jersey, alleges that patients are “coerced” into participating in copay assistance programs after their drugs are deemed “nonessential” and therefore are “no longer subject to the ACA’s annual out-of-pocket maximum.”

Once patients enroll, the money from the drugmaker goes to the insurer or employer plan, with SaveOnSP retaining 25%, according to the lawsuit. It claims J&J has lost $100 million to these efforts. None of that money counts toward patients’ deductibles or out-of-pocket maximums for the year.

In addition to the lawsuit over the copay assistance program efforts, there has been other reaction to the new employer strategies. In an October letter to physicians, the Johnson & Johnson Patient Assistance Foundation, a separate entity, said it will no longer offer free medications to patients with insurance starting in January, citing the rise of such “alternative funding programs.”

Still, J&J spokesperson L.D. Platt said the drugmaker has plans, also in January, to roll out other assistance to patients who may be “underinsured” so they won’t be affected by the foundation’s decision.

In a statement, SaveOnSP said that employers object to drug companies’ “using their employees’ ongoing need for these drugs as an excuse to keep hiking the drugs’ prices” and that the firm simply “advises these employers on how to fight back against rising prices while getting employees the drugs they need at no cost to the employees.”

In a court filing, SaveOnSP said drugmakers have another option if they don’t like efforts by insurers and employers to max out what they can get from the programs: reduce the amount of assistance available. J&J, the filing said, did just that when it recently cut its allotted amount of copay assistance for psoriasis drugs Stelara and Tremfya from $20,000 to $6,000 per participant annually. The filing noted that SaveOnSP participants would still have no copay for those drugs.

For Sutton’s part, her family did participate in the program offered through her husband’s work-based insurance plan, agreeing to have SaveOnSP monitor their enrollment and payments from the drugmaker.

So far, her 15-year-old daughter has continued to get Humira, and she has not been billed a copay.

Even so, “the whole process seems kind of slimy to me,” she said. “The patients are caught in the middle between the drug industry and the insurance industry, each trying to get as much money as possible out of the other.”

Kaiser Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues.

My Story: Why We’re Fighting the DEA

By Louis Ogden, Guest Columnist

I have been troubled by severe and chronic intractable pain since childhood, beginning at age 6.  I am now 72 years old. My earliest memories of pain are of aching in my legs so bad I remember crying myself to sleep.  My parents took me to doctors who said the aches were “growing pains” that would go away as I got older. 

My pain gradually got worse as I grew older and expanded to be body-wide. The worst pain of all was in my neck and upper back, along with incredibly severe head pain. It felt as if my skull was being crushed in every direction. I first remember having the head pain at age 12, but doctors had no answers for my parents and me. 

I finally got a diagnosis of fibromyalgia from a family doctor in 1990 at age 40. I can still remember his exact words when I asked him if there was anything he could give me for the pain.   

"Yes I could, but I won't because it would require opioids and you would be a junkie within two weeks,” the doctor said.  

I carried on with my life, usually with a tin of Excedrin in my pocket that I took to get me through each day. I did have many symptoms of fibromyalgia and it was good to finally have a diagnosis, but it didn’t seem to explain the crushing head pain.  

The pain grew so bad in my 40’s that I could no longer stand to do the demanding physical work required of an electrician and was forced to retire early. 

I was couch-bound most of the time and went on a 13-year search to find a solution to this painful existence. 

I saw many physicians and tried many treatments and medications, including opioids. Unfortunately, none of the therapies or medications eased my pain to tolerable levels. 

LOUIS and kristen OGDEN

Finding Relief With High Doses

In 2010, I sought out more aggressive pain care using high-dose opioid therapy as a last resort.  Dr. Forest Tennant of California took over my care. I think it was at my third appointment with Dr. Tennant when he told my wife Kristen and I that I probably would not have a very long life. I was 60 when he told us that bad news, but I am now 72 and still kicking thanks to his treatment protocol.   

After a thorough review of my medical records, a physical evaluation and various assessments, Dr. Tennant prescribed OxyContin, as well as oxycodone and morphine for breakthrough pain. He titrated me up to where I was comfortable and enjoying the highest quality of life I’d ever had as an adult.  The daily dose I was taking was close to 3,000 morphine milligram equivalent (MME), which is considered quite high. 

For 8 years, I continued on that same regimen. I did not need, nor did I ask for a higher dose, as I was doing great on the daily dose as stabilized.  

Dr. Tennant eventually diagnosed me with Arachnoiditis and Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome (EDS). These rare, but very painful syndromes account for my body-wide, complex, constant and severe pain, including the crushing head pain. I believe I inherited EDS from my mother, her mother, and the maternal line of descent going back at least 6 generations. The exact causes of my need for such high doses of opioids may never be proven, but probably include anomalies of absorption, metabolism and receptor damage due to EDS.  

Once titrated up to an effective dose, I was a very happy, well-adjusted person with a good quality of life, no longer couch-bound in agony and once again able to participate in social activities and perform household chores. My medicine enables this, and I have no sensation of pleasure or “high” of any kind. In fact, people that I meet have no idea that I am on a very high dose of opioids. I do not slur my words, nor am I disoriented. 

The DEA Gets Involved  

After Dr. Tennant was forced into retirement by the DEA in 2018 over unsubstantiated allegations of drug trafficking, I moved on to another doctor in California who kept lowering my dose. It left me not feeling well enough to stay active and enjoy my life, so I moved on to become a patient of Dr. David Bockoff, who assured me at my first appointment that he would do his best to help my pain.  He increased my dose to a level that allowed me to be much more comfortable.   

As PNN has reported, the DEA last month suspended Dr. Bockoff’s registration to prescribe opioids and other controlled drugs, which soon led to the death of one of his patients. Danny Elliott was so distraught over losing his pain medication that he committed suicide, along with his wife Gretchen. The Elliotts were friends of ours and confidants, as we have dealt for years with many of the same problems finding appropriate pain care.  

I am also now facing a life with no pain control and the very serious complications of withdrawal and untreated constant, severe pain.  This situation is very frightening to me, as my blood pressure may spike and I could possibly die of heart failure, an aneurysm or a stroke when/if I run out of medicine.   

The families of several of Dr. Bockoff’s patients, including my wife and I, have pooled our resources and retained the services of an experienced, well-qualified attorney who views our case as a violation of our civil rights. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time that abandoned pain patients have fought back in such a manner.  If we prove our case with the DEA, the suspension order that prevents Dr. Bockoff from prescribing our medications could be lifted and we will get our good doctor back.   

If we do not win at this stage, we will take our case to the next legal step. In the meantime, some 240 patients of Dr. Bockoff are left with no help and no access to life-saving medications.   

It is my understanding that a few more pain management physicians are considering leaving their practices in the near future. As a result, thousands of additional pain patients may soon lose their lifelines to the medications they so desperately need to function. The DEA has a lot of blood on its hands, with possibly more to come. 

Louis Ogden and his wife Kristen live in Virginia. Dr. Tennant and the Tennant Foundation give financial support to Pain News Network and sponsor PNN’s Patient Resources section.  

Do you have a “My Story” to share? Pain News Network invites other readers to share their experiences about living with pain and treating it. Send your stories to editor@painnewsnetwork.org

Can Fentanyl Be Made Safer?

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

Illicit fentanyl has been public health enemy #1 in the United States since 2016, when the DEA first declared there was a "fentanyl crisis" and warned that overdose deaths would increase due to the growing trade in street drugs laced with the potent synthetic opioid. That prediction sadly came true, as illicit fentanyl is now involved in about 71,000 U.S. overdose deaths a year. 

A team of scientists says it can reverse that trend by using sodium to make fentanyl far less dangerous, yet still effective in treating pain. 

“In its current form, fentanyl is like a weapon of mass destruction,” says Vsevolod Katritch, PhD, a computational biologist at the USC Michelson Center for Convergent Bioscience. “Our new collaborative work suggests that we could redesign the drug in such a way that we convert this frequent overdose killer to a much more benign but still effective analgesic.”

Katritch and colleagues at Washington University in St. Louis and Stanford University have published a study in the journal Nature demonstrating that chemically linking sodium to fentanyl can alter the way fentanyl binds to opioid receptors in the brain. In tests on laboratory mice, the modified drug was still an effective pain reliever, but didn’t have as many risky side effects. 

“We are desperately looking for ways to maintain the analgesic effects of opioids, while avoiding dangerous side effects such as addiction and respiratory distress that too often lead to death. Our research is still in its early stages, but we’re excited about its potential for leading to safer pain-relieving drugs,” Susruta Majumdar, PhD, an associate professor of anesthesiology at Washington University, said in a statement.,.

In modifying fentanyl with sodium, researchers developed a variation of the drug that still binds to mu-opioid receptors -- known as G-protein coupled receptors -- but also engages with a sodium ion binding site. That alters the pathway through which fentanyl reduces pain, making it possible for the drug to maintain most of its analgesic effects while also reducing the risk of respiratory depression leading to an overdose.

“The idea that the sodium ion, something we find in table salt, could modulate the activity of G-protein coupled receptors, such as these opioid receptors, is not new, but our group appears to be the first to successfully alter the chemistry of fentanyl so that it interacts with the sodium site on the receptor,” says Majumdar, who believes the same technique can be used in other medications, including other opioids, to make them safer.  

“Almost one-third of all drugs currently on the market — from blood pressure drugs to diabetes drugs to analgesics like fentanyl — bind to various G-protein coupled receptors, so it may be possible to make many drugs more effective, and to limit their side effects, by altering how they bind with such receptors.”

Researchers say further study is needed to prove that their altered version of fentanyl will work in humans, but they believe they've found a way to potentially improve its safety and those of other painkillers.

The research appears promising and may someday benefit pain patients, but it overlooks a simple fact: most of the fentanyl that is killing people is illicitly produced. And the clandestine labs, drug cartels, pill pressers and drug dealers responsible for the vast majority of overdoses will have no interest in adding sodium to their counterfeit pills and other fentanyl-laced drugs to make them safer.

The Nature study also perpetuates some longstanding myths about the overdose crisis, calling fentanyl and other prescription opioids a "major public health concern due to their adverse side effects."

But as pain management expert Dr. Lynn Webster pointed out in a 2019 PNN column, calling fentanyl a "weapon of mass destruction" is a bit of an overreach. Fentanyl has been legally used for decades -- safely and effectively -- as a surgical analgesic, and in transdermal patches and lozenges intended for patients with severe pain from cancer and other intractable pain conditions.

"Each of these new uses of fentanyl exposed millions of Americans to the drug without evidence of an inordinate degree of harm if it was used as directed," Webster wrote. "The opioid crisis is now largely driven by nonpharmaceutical fentanyl and fentanyl analogs, not prescription fentanyl."

Few pain patients who use fentanyl as directed become addicted or overdose, although many do become dependent on the drug to continue working, perform simple household chores, maintain personal hygiene, and have some quality of life. Modifying prescription fentanyl with sodium to make it safer might benefit some of those patients, but it will likely have no effect on the fentanyl crisis or prevent many overdoses.

Should Older Adults Risk Major Surgery?

By Judith Graham, Kaiser Health News

Nearly 1 in 7 older adults die within a year of undergoing major surgery, according to an important new study that sheds much-needed light on the risks seniors face when having invasive procedures.

Especially vulnerable are older patients with probable dementia (33% die within a year) and frailty (28%), as well as those having emergency surgeries (22%). Advanced age also amplifies risk: Patients who were 90 or older were six times as likely to die than those ages 65 to 69.

The study in JAMA Surgery, published by researchers at Yale School of Medicine, addresses a notable gap in research: Though patients 65 and older undergo nearly 40% of all surgeries in the U.S., detailed national data about the outcomes of these procedures has been largely missing.

“As a field, we’ve been really remiss in not understanding long-term surgical outcomes for older adults,” said Dr. Zara Cooper, a professor of surgery at Harvard Medical School and the director of the Center for Geriatric Surgery at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston.

Of particular importance is information about how many seniors die, develop disabilities, can no longer live independently, or have a significantly worsened quality of life after major surgery.

“What older patients want to know is, ‘What’s my life going to look like?’” Cooper said. “But we haven’t been able to answer with data of this quality before.”

In the new study, Dr. Thomas Gill and Yale colleagues examined claims data from traditional Medicare and survey data from the National Health and Aging Trends study spanning 2011 to 2017. (Data from private Medicare Advantage plans was not available at that time but will be included in future studies.)

Invasive procedures that take place in operating rooms with patients under general anesthesia were counted as major surgeries. Examples include procedures to replace broken hips, improve blood flow in the heart, excise cancer from the colon, remove gallbladders, fix leaky heart valves, and repair hernias, among many more.

More Complications

Older adults tend to experience more problems after surgery if they have chronic conditions such as heart or kidney disease; if they are already weak or have difficulty moving around; if their ability to care for themselves is compromised; and if they have cognitive problems, noted Gill, a professor of medicine, epidemiology, and investigative medicine at Yale.

Two years ago, Gill’s team conducted research that showed 1 in 3 older adults had not returned to their baseline level of functioning six months after major surgery. Most likely to recover were seniors who had elective surgeries for which they could prepare in advance.

In another study, published last year in the Annals of Surgery, his team found that about 1 million major surgeries occur in individuals 65 and older each year, including a significant number near the end of life. Remarkably, data documenting the extent of surgery in the older population has been lacking until now.

“This opens up all kinds of questions: Were these surgeries done for a good reason? How is appropriate surgery defined? Were the decisions to perform surgery made after eliciting the patient’s priorities and determining whether surgery would achieve them?” said Dr. Clifford Ko, a professor of surgery at UCLA School of Medicine and director of the Division of Research and Optimal Patient Care at the American College of Surgeons.

As an example of this kind of decision-making, Ko described a patient who, at 93, learned he had early-stage colon cancer on top of preexisting liver, heart, and lung disease. After an in-depth discussion and being told that the risk of poor results was high, the patient decided against invasive treatment.

“He decided he would rather take the risk of a slow-growing cancer than deal with a major operation and the risk of complications,” Ko said.

Still, most patients choose surgery. Dr. Marcia Russell, a staff surgeon at the Veterans Affairs Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, described a 90-year-old patient who recently learned he had colon cancer during a prolonged hospital stay for pneumonia.

“We talked with him about surgery, and his goals are to live as long as possible,” said Russell. To help prepare the patient, now recovering at home, for future surgery, she recommended he undertake physical therapy and eat more high-protein foods, measures that should help him get stronger.

“He may need six to eight weeks to get ready for surgery, but he’s motivated to improve,” Russell said.

Not Enough Surgeons

The choices older Americans make about undergoing major surgery will have broad societal implications. As the 65-plus population expands, “covering surgery is going to be fiscally challenging for Medicare,” noted Dr. Robert Becher, an assistant professor of surgery at Yale and a research collaborator with Gill. Just over half of Medicare spending is devoted to inpatient and outpatient surgical care, according to a 2020 analysis.

What’s more, “nearly every surgical subspecialty is going to experience workforce shortages in the coming years,” Becher said, noting that in 2033, there will be nearly 30,000 fewer surgeons than needed to meet expected demand.

These trends make efforts to improve surgical outcomes for older adults even more critical. Yet progress has been slow. The American College of Surgeons launched a major quality improvement program in July 2019, eight months before the covid-19 pandemic hit. It requires hospitals to meet 30 standards to achieve recognized expertise in geriatric surgery. So far, fewer than 100 of the thousands of hospitals eligible are participating.

One of the most advanced systems in the country, the Center for Geriatric Surgery at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, illustrates what’s possible. There, older adults who are candidates for surgery are screened for frailty. Those judged to be frail consult with a geriatrician, undergo a thorough geriatric assessment, and meet with a nurse who will help coordinate care after discharge.

Also initiated are “geriatric-friendly” orders for post-surgery hospital care. This includes assessing older patients three times a day for delirium (an acute change in mental status that often afflicts older hospital patients), getting patients moving as soon as possible, and using non-narcotic pain relievers. “The goal is to minimize the harms of hospitalization,” said Cooper, who directs the effort.

She told me about a recent patient, whom she described as a “social woman in her early 80s who was still wearing skinny jeans and going to cocktail parties.” This woman came to the emergency room with acute diverticulitis and delirium; a geriatrician was called in before surgery to help manage her medications and sleep-wake cycle, and recommend non-pharmaceutical interventions.

With the help of family members who visited this patient in the hospital and have remained involved in her care, “she’s doing great,” Cooper said. “It’s the kind of outcome we work very hard to achieve.”

Kaiser Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues.

Stopping Rx Opioid Therapy Raises Risk of Overdose

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

Discontinuing opioid therapy for people with chronic pain raises the risk of a patient dying from an overdose, according to a new Canadian study that calls for better guidance for healthcare providers on the risks associated with abrupt tapering.

Researchers analyzed the medical histories of over 14,000 pain patients in British Columbia who were on long term opioid therapy from 2014 to 2018 – a period when physicians in Canada and the United States were being urged to restrict opioid prescriptions due to a worsening overdose crisis. The vast majority of patients studied were either tapered to a lower dose or their opioid treatment was discontinued, regardless of whether they showed signs of opioid use disorder (OUD).  

The study findings, published in PLOS Medicine, show that discontinuing opioid therapy for pain was associated with increased overdose risk. The association was even stronger for the small minority of patients diagnosed with OUD. In total, 530 people in the study (3.8%) experienced either a fatal or non-fatal overdose, with 120 of them dying.

“Our findings underscore the need for healthcare providers and policymakers to carefully consider potential unintended adverse effects of discontinuing opioid treatment for chronic pain when developing prescribing interventions and making practice decisions,” wrote lead author Mary Clare Kennedy, PhD, a Research Scientist with the BC Centre on Substance Use and a Research Fellow at the University of British Columbia.

“Given the harms of opioid treatment discontinuation identified in this and past studies, non-consensual and abrupt discontinuation of opioid treatment for pain is contraindicated in almost all instances.”

Kennedy and her colleagues were unable to determine what substances were involved in the overdoses, but they believe some patients who had their opioid therapy stopped may have resorted to illicit fentanyl and other street drugs to manage their pain, withdrawal and other symptoms. Over 73% of the overdose deaths that occurred in British Columbia during the study period involved fentanyl.

Previous studies have also found that opioid tapering raises the risk of an overdose and mental health crisis. A study published last year in JAMA found that tapered patients were 68% more likely to be treated for opioid withdrawal, drug overdose or alcohol intoxication, and they were twice as likely to experience depression, anxiety or a suicide attempt.

The FDA warned in 2019 that rapid tapering or abrupt discontinuation of opioids could result in serious harm to patients, including withdrawal, uncontrolled pain, psychological distress and suicide.

‘Reckless Mistreatment of Patients’

Despite this growing body of evidence, forced tapering and opioid discontinuation continues – some of it caused by the heavy-handed tactics of law enforcement. Over 200 pain patients were recently cut off from opioids after their California doctor had his DEA license suspended without warning. One patient and his wife died by suicide within a week of the DEA’s action.

“Not only are we collectively causing harm, we are failing to stop causing harm even when we agree that we're causing it, which is actually worse,” says Stefan Kertesz, MD, an associate professor at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, who is leading a study of pain patient suicides.

Kertesz says regulators, insurers, journalists and law enforcement have misinterpreted overdose studies to suggest that opioid prescribing, particularly at higher doses, was the root cause of the overdose crisis.  

“Many clinicians and policymakers engaged in aggressive extrapolation that went far beyond the data. Many journalists and legal plaintiffs described the prescriptions in a way that aggravated matters. They made dose into a fetish, a performance metric, and a threshold for law enforcement,” Kertesz told PNN. “Dose based quality metrics, payor standards and legal investigation thresholds incentivize reckless mistreatment of patients.

“My ultimate question is when will agencies like the National Committee for Quality Assurance, the Office of Inspector General, and law enforcement actually come to appreciate the evidence in play?”

It took six years, but the CDC recently revised its 2016 opioid guideline to include specific language warning of the dangers of tapering or discontinuing opioids.

“Clinicians should avoid abrupt discontinuation of opioids, especially for patients receiving high dosages of opioids, should avoid dismissing patients from care, and should ensure appropriate care for patients with pain and patients with complications from opioid use,” the revised guideline states.

Steroid Injections May Worsen Knee Arthritis

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

Two new studies are raising doubts about a commonly used treatment for knee osteoarthritis, a progressive and painful condition found in many older adults. Corticosteroid injections in the knee are often used to relieve osteoarthritis pain by reducing inflammation in the joint, with the relief lasting for days, weeks or sometimes months.

But a new long-term study by researchers at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) found that corticosteroid injections appear to worsen the progression of knee osteoarthritis compared to patients who received injections of hyaluronic acid, a polymer gel that acts as a lubricant and shock absorber.

UCSF researchers followed 210 patients with knee osteoarthritis (OA). Seventy of the patients received injections of either corticosteroids or hyaluronic acid, while the rest received no injections and served as a control group. MRI scans were performed on all participants at the start of the study and again two years later, focusing on the meniscus, bone marrow lesions, cartilage, joint effusion and ligaments.

“This is the first direct comparison of corticosteroid and hyaluronic acid injections using the semi-quantitative, whole organ assessment of the knee with MRI,” said Upasana Upadhyay Bharadwaj, MD, a research fellow in the Department of Radiology at UCSF.

In findings presented this week at the annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA), Bharadwaj reported that corticosteroid injections were significantly associated with the progression of knee OA, specifically in the lateral meniscus, lateral cartilage and medial cartilage.

Hyaluronic injections were not associated with the progression of knee OA. Patients who received hyaluronic acid showed a decreased progression of osteoarthritis, specifically in bone marrow lesions, compared to the control group. 

The findings are important because osteoarthritis is the most common form of arthritis, causing progressive joint damage and thinning of cartilage.  Over 32 million U.S. adults have knee OA, and about 10% of them receive corticosteroid or hyaluronic injections.

“While both corticosteroid and hyaluronic acid injections are reported to help with symptomatic pain relief for knee osteoarthritis, our results conclusively show that corticosteroids are associated with significant progression of knee osteoarthritis up to two years post-injection and must be administered with caution,” Bharadwaj said. “Hyaluronic acid, on the other hand, may slow down progression of knee osteoarthritis and alleviate long term effects while offering symptomatic relief.

“Knowing the long-term effects of these injections will help osteoarthritis patients and clinicians make more informed decisions for managing the disease and the pain it causes.”

In a second study presented at the RSNA’s annual meeting, researchers at the Chicago Medical School compared X-ray images of 50 patients with knee OA who received injections of corticosteroids to 50 patients who received injections of hyaluronic acid. Another 50 patients who had no injections served as a control group. Like the UCSF study, X-rays of all patients were taken at the start of the study and again two years later.

The findings mirrored those found in the first study. Patients injected with corticosteroids had significantly more osteoarthritis progression, including medial joint space narrowing, a hallmark of the disease.

“Even though imaging findings for all patients were similar at baseline, the imaging hallmarks of osteoarthritis were worse two years later in patients who received corticosteroid injections compared to patients who received hyaluronic acid injections or no treatment at all,” said Azad Darbandi, a researcher and medical student.

“The results suggest that hyaluronic acid injections should be further explored for the management of knee osteoarthritis symptoms, and that steroid injections should be utilized with more caution.”

The Mayo Clinic recommends that corticosteroid injections be limited to once every six weeks, and that knee OA patients receive injections no more than three or four times a year.

There was a third long-term study presented at the RSNA meeting that debunked another common treatment for knee OA: non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). UCFS researchers found that NSAIDs worsen inflammation and weaken cartilage in patients with osteoarthritis, contributing to a painful joint condition called synovitis. MRI imaging at the start of the study found joint inflammation and cartilage quality were worse in patients taking NSAIDs, and their knee joints deteriorated even more after four years. 

Spinal Cord Stimulators Fail to Reduce Opioid Use

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

A large new study is raising questions about the long-term effectiveness of spinal cord stimulators and whether they really help patients reduce their use of opioids and other pain treatments.

Researchers at the University of California San Francisco (UCSF) School of Medicine analyzed health data for 1,260 patients who received permanent stimulators and found that — when compared to a control group — the devices did not reduce their use of opioids, epidurals, corticosteroid injections or radiofrequency ablation after two years. About a fifth of the patients experienced complications so severe the devices had to be removed or revised.

Spinal cord stimulators (SCSs) are considered an invasive treatment of last resort for people with chronic back or leg pain, because the devices have to be surgically implanted near the spine and connected to batteries placed under the skin. The implants send electrical impulses into the spine to mask pain.

About 50,000 SCSs are implanted annually in the U.S. and their use is growing – in part because of the belief they’ll reduce the need for opioids and other pain therapies.

But UCSF researchers found that SCS patients actually filled more opioid prescriptions after one year than a control group of pain patients (CMM) who did not get the devices. The use of other medications and procedures by SCS patients declined slightly after one year, but there were no significant differences between the two groups after two years.

“The lack of reduction in pharmacotherapy, epidural and facet corticosteroid injections, and radiofrequency ablations at 2 years among patients receiving SCS compared with those receiving CMM suggests that SCS was providing insufficient pain relief to forego other therapies or improve rates of depression or anxiety, as prescriptions for these drug classes did not decline,” lead author Sanket Dhruva, MD, an Assistant Professor of Medicine at UCSF, wrote in JAMA Neurology.

“Because most patients still had their permanent SCS in place at 2 years, some may receive prolonged benefit from this modality, although we were not able to identify this through reductions in opioid use or nonpharmacologic pain interventions.”

Researchers also found that the total cost of care was about $39,000 higher for SCS patients in the first year, while health costs were similar for the two groups in the second year.

‘Sobering Insights’

"The findings appear to belie the popular belief that SCS may result in reduced opioid medication usage or overall fewer physician visits in the years immediately following device implant," wrote Prasad Shirvalkar, MD, and Lawrence Poree, MD, both from the UCSF Division of Pain Medicine, in an accompanying editorial.

“Using robust propensity matching, the present study provides sobering insights that SCS does not appear to reduce chronic opioid use or the utilization of health care resources compared with CMM in the first 2 years after implant. We believe this will help mitigate excessive enthusiasm of SCS as a panacea for chronic pain syndromes and illuminate biases of SCS hype cycle that can possibly be fueled by industry-related conflicts of interest.”

Stimulators are no longer limited to patients with chronic back, neck and leg pain. Last year the FDA expanded the use of SCSs to include pain from diabetic neuropathy. Stimulators are also now being used on patients with Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS).

A 2018 study by a team of investigative journalists found that SCSs have some of the worst safety records of medical devices tracked by the FDA. A 2020 FDA review of adverse events involving stimulators found that nearly a third were reports of unsatisfactory pain relief. The review also identified nearly 500 deaths linked to the devices, along with nearly 78,000 injuries and 30,000 device malfunctions.

Cannabis Works No Better Than Placebo in Pain Studies

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

The placebo effect is responsible for much of the pain relief experienced by participants in clinical trials of cannabis, according to new analysis that also found a “strong positive bias” in media coverage of the studies.

Researchers at the Karolinska Institute in Sweden analyzed the results of 20 placebo-controlled studies of cannabis products involving almost 1,500 people with chronic pain conditions. The cannabis products were administered as pills, sprays, oils, smoke or vapor; and most of the studies were conducted in the United States, UK or Canada.

Researchers found that many participants reported significant pain relief, but there were no differences in pain reduction between those who used cannabis products and those who used a placebo, a sham treatment that should have no effect.

“There is a distinct and clinically relevant placebo response in studies of cannabis for pain,” says Filip Gedin, PhD, a researcher in the Department of Clinical Neuroscience at Karolinska and lead author of the study published in JAMA Network Open.

Gedin and his colleagues also examined coverage the 20 studies received in the news media using Altmetric, a method of evaluating mentions in the media as either positive, negative or neutral. They did not identify the publishers of the 136 news articles that were analyzed or provide any examples of their coverage.

Researchers found that the cannabis studies received much greater media attention than other clinical studies and tended to be more positive, regardless of what the studies’ outcomes actually were. The media coverage of cannabis was so positive, in fact, that researchers wonder if it might influence findings in future studies.  

“The positive media attention and wide dissemination may uphold high expectations and shape placebo responses in future trials, which has the potential to affect the outcome of clinical trials, regulatory decisions, clinical practice, and ultimately patient access to cannabinoids for pain relief,” Gedin wrote. “We therefore consider this question to be of high importance, as the positive reporting toward cannabinoids regardless of study quality and effect size may subsequently lead to increased expectations that may ultimately influence the outcomes in clinical trials.”

The placebo effect is a well-documented but poorly understood condition in which a patient responds to a sham drug or treatment that should have no therapeutic value. A 2018 study at Northwestern University, for example, found that about half of patients who took a sugar pill they thought was an analgesic had a 30% reduction in pain – a level considered good enough for an actual painkiller.    

In another study, researchers identified some participants as “placebo responders” who are more likely to respond to a sugar pill because their brains react differently – which may explain why some patients find a medication effective and others don’t.    

Whatever the cause, researchers at the Karolinska Institute say more effort is needed to understand the placebo effect and how media coverage could make it even more potent.

“We cannot say with 100% certainty that media coverage is responsible for the high placebo response observed in our review,” Gedin wrote in an op/ed published in The Conversation.

“But given placebos were shown to be just as good as cannabis for managing pain, our results show just how important it is to think about the placebo effect and how it can be influenced by external factors – such as media coverage. For treatments, such as cannabinoids, that receive a lot of media attention, we need to be extra rigorous in our clinical trials.”