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FDA Approves First Implant Treatment For Opioid Addiction (bloomberg.com) 49

An anonymous reader writes from a report via Bloomberg: The Food and Drug Administration cleared the first implant in the U.S. to treat heroin and opioid painkiller addictions. The product, Probuphine, may be used to treat addicts continuously for six months with the drug buprenorphine, according to a statement from the agency on Thursday. Titan Pharmaceuticals Inc. and partner Braeburn Pharmaceuticals are the two companies behind the implant and plan to bring it to the market just as Congress passed a bill aimed at addressing the opioid crisis. Buprenorphine differs from methadone in that it doesn't require a treatment program. Doctors can prescribe the implant to patients after they take a four-hour training program. The FDA rejected the implant in 2013 because the original dose that the companies proposed was too low to provide effective treatment. The companies decided to maintain the lower dose and attempt to gain approval by restricting use to patients who already were stable on such amounts. Meanwhile, employers are struggling to find workers who can pass a pre-employment drug test.
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FDA Approves First Implant Treatment For Opioid Addiction

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  • .. doesn't require a treatment program"

    Nope, just an "oil-change" every six months. Sounds like a great revenue generator for the manufacture.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 27, 2016 @11:24PM (#52199911)

    It's a maintenance program that's a little less vulnerable to diversion. This exists for naltrexone already (an antagonist).

    Implanting opioids inside of people probably isn't the solution to the "opioid crisis" that you're looking for. In other news, opioid overdose deaths have fallen dramatically here since a medical marijuana program was established; might consider looking in to that, guys. You know, the drug that doesn't cause respiratory depression and can't be injected.

    • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

      Just out of curiosity driven by this story and apart from getting to this very very suspicious site http://www.naabt.org/buprenorp... [naabt.org] compared to this more realistic site http://www.streetinsider.com/C... [streetinsider.com], it seems like the drug and treatment might not be all it is cracked up to be. I'll bet before to long we will see lobbyists demanding it be compulsory for all opioid drug offenders, profit, profit, profit, you can really see it coming.

    • Been working on heated big bore needles for my plan to go IV on bacon grease and alfredo sauce, should work with hash oil.

  • Well did you?

    • I'm afraid that I may become addicted to books/movies of that genre.

      Note - this may sound like a joke, but I know myself too well, I've become morbidly fascinated with unhealthy ideas from the written word before. For me at least, watching this film or reading the book is very likely unwise - I'm likely to enjoy it for all the wrong reasons. I've read synopses and reviews and that's enough to get the important social message, I don't need to read the book or see the film in all of its gory detail.

  • by swb ( 14022 ) on Saturday May 28, 2016 @06:55AM (#52200631)

    As much as society struggles with drug addiction, I'm surprised we haven't figured out that maybe the better solution is invent better recreational drugs. Drugs purposefully engineered to provide euphoria similar to street drugs, but engineered to limit the risks of overdose and abuse.

    Could they engineer a drug that provided a high with the first dose but for which subsequent doses had an exponentially decreasing marginal utility or which couldn't be taken again for any increase or new high until some hours had passed? Some of this may just be a question of formulation, with a dose of a time-release longer-life agonist that both eventually reduced the high and blocked any new high from happening.

    You can come up with a bunch of engineering goals that would allow for a person to take such drug and make abuse very difficult due to limited repeat use, lack of overdose potential, etc.

    The biggest part problem we seem to have with drugs is the relentless notion that taking any substance to enjoy a euphoria is wrong, leading us to just hang onto a whole panoply of drugs that have nasty side effects or risks. What if instead of continuing to fail to eliminate them, we simply out-competed the old drugs in the market by replacing them with better, cheaper safer drugs?

    I think legalizing marijuana is part of this, because it actually has a lot of the qualities of a better drug -- once you're stoned, it's less useful to smoke more pot while you're stoned and at a certain point more pot doesn't really make you more high. It has an extremely low overdose potential, is non-addictive and doesn't produce much in the way of chronic health problems (smoking aside).

  • It really concerns me that Congress thinks it knows better than doctors do and now want to "train" doctors how to prescribe opiod pain medications. In my state there's talk about restricting the amount a doctor can prescribe to three days worth.

    This issue hits particularly close to home, as I recently broke my foot and started taking opiod pain meds. If my doctor was prohibited from prescribing an adequate course of medication my pain would be undertreated. That's not OK with me.

  • This may treat the physical addiction, but what about the psychological one? If someone turns to these drugs for relief from stress, boredom, or loneliness, then this habit will remain even though the physical 'need ' isn't there. you got a substitute for that? how about a 'soul' patch?

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