National Drug Intelligence Center
Information Bulletin OxyContin Diversion and Abuse
Overview
Diversion
and abuse of the prescription pain reliever OxyContin is a major
problem, particularly in the eastern United States. The Drug
Enforcement Administration (DEA) reports that, in the United States,
oxycodone products, including OxyContin, are frequently abused
pharmaceuticals. The pharmacological effects of OxyContin make it a
suitable substitute for heroin; therefore, it is attractive to the
same abuser population. Law enforcement reports indicate heroin
abusers are obtaining OxyContin because the pharmaceutical drug offers
reliable strength and dosage levels. In addition, if the abusers'
health insurance covers an illness that the drug treats, the insurance
provider may cover the cost of the drug. Conversely, OxyContin abusers
who have never used heroin may be attracted to the lower priced heroin
when their health insurance no longer pays for OxyContin prescriptions
or when they cannot afford the high street-level price of OxyContin.
For example the West Virginia, Hancock-Brooke-Weirton Drug Task Force
reports that a local couple, recently sentenced for conspiracy to sell
heroin, turned to heroin after their doctor refused to continue
prescribing OxyContin and they could not afford the street price of
the pharmaceutical. OxyContin abusers sometimes commit theft, armed
robbery, and fraud to sustain their habits.
The illegal diversion, distribution, and abuse of oxycodone products,
particularly OxyContin, appear to be concentrated most heavily in the
East, according to respondents to the National Drug Intelligence
Center (NDIC) National Drug Threat Survey 2000 and DEA reporting.
OxyContin Tablet, commonly referred to as OxyContin, has become the
oxycodone product of choice in Maine, Ohio, and West Virginia, and in
portions of eastern Kentucky, Maryland, western Pennsylvania, and
rural southwestern Virginia.
Kentucky-The
Kentucky State Police reports that OxyContin is the drug of choice in
eastern Kentucky. The Kentucky State Police in Hazard report a
significant shift from cocaine and methamphetamine abuse to OxyContin
and Tylox abuse. Tylox is another trade name oxycodone product.
Maine-The U.S.
Attorney, District of Maine, identifies OxyContin as the most
significant drug threat in the state.
Maryland-The
Maryland Drug Early Warning System, a real-time substance abuse
monitoring program, identifies oxycodone as a leading emerging drug of
abuse in 2000. The DEA reports nearly 85 percent of 1999 arrests for
writing false prescriptions in Maryland involved oxycodone products,
including OxyContin.
Ohio-The
Cincinnati Police Department's Pharmaceutical Diversion Squad reports
a growing OxyContin threat. From January to October 2000, illicit drug
dealers in Cincinnati diverted over 9,000 doses of OxyContin (31
percent of all diverted oxycodone products). During the same time
period, 49 of the squad's 341 diversion investigations targeted
OxyContin, resulting in 22 arrests.
Pennsylvania-The
Cambria County Drug Task Force reports that, as of September 2000,
almost 30 percent of its undercover drug purchases involved OxyContin,
and 31 suspects were accused of distributing tens of thousands of
dollars' worth of OxyContin.
West Virginia-The
Gilbert Police Department reports OxyContin is the "worst" drug the
department has ever encountered, with OxyContin abuse even surpassing
marijuana abuse.
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Background
OxyContin
is a trade name product for the generic narcotic oxycodone
hydrochloride, an opiate agonist. Opiate agonists provide pain relief
by acting on opioid receptors in the spinal cord, brain, and possibly
in the tissues directly. Opioids, natural or synthetic classes of
drugs that act like morphine, are the most effective pain relievers
available. Oxycodone is manufactured by modifying thebaine, an
alkaloid found in opium. Oxycodone has a high abuse potential and is
prescribed for moderate to high pain relief associated with injuries,
bursitis, dislocation, fractures, neuralgia, arthritis, and lower back
and cancer pain. It is also used postoperatively and for pain relief
after childbirth. Percocet, Percodan, and Tylox are other trade name
oxycodone products.
Oxycodone is
a central nervous system depressant. Oxycodone's action appears to
work through stimulating the opioid receptors found in the central
nervous system that activate responses ranging from analgesia to
respiratory depression to euphoria. People who take the drug
repeatedly can develop a tolerance or resistance to the drug's
effects. Thus, a cancer patient can take a dose of oxycodone on a
regular basis that would be fatal in a person never exposed to
oxycodone or another opioid. Most individuals who abuse oxycodone seek
to gain the euphoric effects, mitigate pain, and avoid withdrawal
symptoms associated with oxycodone or heroin abstinence.
OxyContin is
an oral, controlled-release oxycodone that acts for 12 hours, making
it the longest lasting oxycodone on the market. Patients taking
shorter acting oxycodone products, such as Percocet, may need to take
the product every 4 to 6 hours. While drug doses vary by individual,
the typical OxyContin dose prescribed by physicians ranges from two to
four tablets per day. OxyContin was developed and patented in 1996 by
Purdue Pharma L.P. and was originally available in 10 milligram (mg),
20 mg, 40 mg, and 80 mg tablets. A 160 mg tablet became available in
July 2000. By comparison, Percocet and Tylox contain 5 mg of oxycodone
and Percodan-Demi contains just 2.25 mg. The strength, duration, and
known dosage of OxyContin are the primary reasons the drug is
attractive to both abusers and legitimate users.
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Abuse
The abuse
of oxycodone products in general has increased in recent years. In
April 2000, The Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA)
published a study, which examined two data collection sources. The DEA
Automation of Reports and Consolidated Orders System (ARCOS) data
tracks the distribution of oxycodone and other opioid analgesics and
the Drug Abuse Warning Network (DAWN) Medical Examiner (ME) and
Emergency Department (ED) data ascertained the health consequences
associated with its abuse from 1990 to 1996. The JAMA study found a 23
percent increase in the medical use of oxycodone with no corresponding
increase in the illicit abuse of the drug. However, 1998 DAWN ME data
reported a 93 percent increase in oxycodone mentions between 1997 and
1998 and the number of oxycodone-related DAWN ED mentions increased
32.4 percent from 1997 (4,857) to 1999 (6,429).
Several deaths have resulted specifically from the abuse of OxyContin
in Kentucky, Ohio, Virginia, and West Virginia. The Pike County,
Kentucky, Coroner reported 19 OxyContin-related deaths during calendar
year 2000. In December 2000, seven OxyContin overdose deaths were
reported in Southeastern Kentucky by two Kentucky State Police posts.
The Logan Daily News reported in October 2000 that four Hocking
County, Ohio, residents overdosed on OxyContin over an 18-day period.
Two of the four died. There have been at least four OxyContin overdose
deaths in Pulaski, Virginia, since 1998. In July 2000, The
Williamson Daily reported five OxyContin-related overdose deaths
in southwestern West Virginia since May 2000.
OxyContin is designed to be swallowed whole; however, abusers ingest
the drug in a variety of ways. OxyContin abusers often chew the
tablets or crush the tablets and snort the powder. Because oxycodone
is water soluble, crushed tablets can be dissolved in water and the
solution injected. The latter two methods lead to the rapid release
and absorption of oxycodone. The alcohol and drug treatment staff at
the Mountain Comprehensive Care Center, Prestonsburg, Kentucky,
reports individuals who have never injected drugs are using OxyContin
intravenously and they have never seen a drug "proliferate like
OxyContin has since May 2000." The staff at this center has over 90
cumulative years' experience conducting drug evaluations.
OxyContin and
heroin have similar effects; therefore, both drugs are attractive to
the same abuser population. OxyContin is sometimes referred to as
"poor man's heroin," despite the high price it commands at the street
level. A 40 mg tablet of OxyContin by prescription costs approximately
$4 or $400 for a 100-tablet bottle in a retail pharmacy. Street prices
vary depending on geographic location, but generally OxyContin sells
for between 50 cents and $1 per milligram. Thus, the same 100-tablet
bottle purchased for $400 at a retail pharmacy can sell for $2,000 to
$4,000 illegally.
OxyContin is,
however, relatively inexpensive for those covered by health insurance,
since the insurance provider covers most costs associated with doctor
visits and the prescription. Unfortunately, many OxyContin abusers
whose health insurance will no longer pay for prescriptions and who
cannot afford the high street-level prices are attracted to heroin.
For example, in West Virginia the availability of lower cost heroin is
attracting many OxyContin abusers who have never used heroin.
|
Strength |
Licit Retail |
Illicit Retail |
|
Price per tablet |
Price per tablet |
|
10 mg |
$1.25 |
$5 to $10 |
|
20 mg |
$2.30 |
$10 to $20 |
|
40 mg |
$4.00 |
$25 to $40 |
|
80 mg |
$6.00 |
$65 to $80 |
|
160 mg |
$14.00 |
unknown |
Source: Cincinnati
Police Department Pharmaceutical Diversion Squad, November 2000
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Related
Criminal Activity and Diversion
Drugs such as OxyContin are diverted in a variety of ways
including pharmacy diversion, "doctor shopping," and improper
prescribing practices by physicians. Pharmacy diversion occurs when
individuals working in pharmacies take products directly from the
shelves, or when people make fraudulent prescriptions. Two pharmacists
in Mercer County, West Virginia, were charged in September 2000 with
illegally obtaining pain relieving hydrocodone pills. They allegedly
took the pills directly off the pharmacy shelves and created
fraudulent prescriptions. They then traded the drugs for sexual
favors.
The most
widely used diversion technique at the street level is doctor
shopping. Individuals, who may or may not have a legitimate ailment
requiring a doctor's prescription for controlled substances, visit
numerous doctors, sometimes in several states, to acquire large
amounts of controlled substances they abuse or sell to others. This
problem is pronounced in southwestern Virginia and southern West
Virginia.
Improper
prescribing practices by unscrupulous physicians are another way of
diverting pharmaceuticals, according to law enforcement sources
surveyed by the NDIC. For example, a White Sulphur Springs, West
Virginia, physician was sentenced on October 24, 2000, and will spend
more than 2 years in federal prison for Medicaid fraud and for
dispensing prescription sedatives and painkillers in exchange for sex.
Also in October 2000, a Grundy, Virginia, physician was arrested and
charged with 79 counts of illegally dispensing prescription drugs,
including OxyContin.
The abuse of
OxyContin, as with the abuse of most prescription drugs, creates a
cycle of health care fraud. For example, a corrupt physician writes a
patient a prescription for a pain reliever for a nonexistent injury.
The physician bills the insurance company for that, and subsequent,
visits. The patient uses a portion of the prescribed pills and sells
the rest for a substantial profit. This type of health care fraud is
quite prominent in West Virginia, where the Huntington Drug and
Violent Crime Task Force reports "there are too many doctors (in West
Virginia) supplementing their income by writing improper
prescriptions."
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