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Andy Sachs is not the
stereotypical opiate junkie. He gets his drugs from a pharmacy,
not a street dealer. He began taking his medicine for severe pain,
not for the high. And the drug he's hooked on is more widely used
than heroin. Six million people a year take OxyContin.
His way out of addiction may be unusual
as well: He chose a controversial treatment designed to rid him
of his drug dependence in two days.
Sachs, 26, a Las Vegas
mortgage banker, is among the newest breed of opiate junkies — those
created, fueled and (Sachs hopes) cured by modern medicine.
Until just a few months ago, he says,
he had never before abused drugs. But Sachs, who played basketball,
football and rugby in college, started taking OxyContin last winter
after back surgery. The drug is a potent painkiller most often prescribed
to people whose pain has failed to respond to medicines such as
Vicodin and Percocet.
But in recent years, it has made headlines for being "diverted" from
legitimate needs to being abused.
There is no estimate of how many people
end up abusing the drug, but the Drug Enforcement Agency has tracked
increases in both OxyContin-related deaths and emergency-room visits.
Federal drug agents have tried to
crack down on the illegal trade of the drug, and government health
officials have increasingly urged doctors to warn patients about
the risk of becoming addicted to it.
Sachs knows that risk
firsthand. After six months on OxyContin, after several failed
attempts to wean himself from the drug, he knew he needed help.
He had seen a television report on patients at a controversial
clinic in California. At the time, he says, "I thought I
would never have it that bad."
But he was wrong.
And so he picked up the phone and called the Waismann Institute,
where the rich, the famous and the desperate go for what is known
unofficially as
"rapid detox" — a
term the center rejects as overly simplistic.
People who are hooked on opiates can
sleep through their withdrawal. Doctors use drugs to break the opiate's
bond on the brain, and the patient wakes up with a dummy drug blocking
the cravings. Patients are in and out of the hospital in two days.
Several variations of the treatment
are offered at a handful of clinics that advertise on the Internet,
and an unknown number of doctors nationwide perform the procedure
secretly.
Rapid detox has many critics. The
medical establishment is leery of a quick fix that costs as much
as $10,000 [see disclaimer below], is not covered by insurance and has not been compared
in peer-reviewed clinical trials with traditional treatments.
"There have been some studies
that suggest that ultra-rapid detox may be OK," says H. Westley
Clark, director of the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment at the
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. "But other studies
have showed limited results."
Critics also point to six deaths at
a New Jersey rapid-detox center where 2,350 patients had been treated
over seven years.
Federal officials called those deaths
unacceptable.
Money and risks aside, "it's
one thing getting people drug-free," says Ron Jackson, a social
worker at Evergreen Treatment Services, a Seattle methadone clinic.
"It's another trying to keep them drug-free."
Prescription for Trouble
OxyContin can be tough to beat.
The drug is one of the most powerful
tools in a pain doctor's arsenal. The drug releases medication slowly
as the pill melts in the small intestine.
But, federal drug officials warn doctors,
one in 3,000 people who take opiates for pain become addicted. The
body gets accustomed to the drug and begins to tolerate it. If the
root cause of the pain does not heal, the person will have to take
more and more of the drug to feel relief.
"When you start raising the dosage,
now you've committed yourself to using this drug for life,"
says Clifford Alexander Bernstein, a pain specialist who performs
the detox treatment at Waismann. "The best you can hope for
with this drug is that the dose doesn't escalate."
Sachs says his
doctor never fully explained the drug's risks. He started taking
OxyContin in December for back pain. He was prescribed the drug
again after back surgery in January. As his dosage went up, his
dance with addiction began.
A missed dose made him feel desperate.
The underlying pain returned, and the craving for the pill grew
stronger.
One day he decided
to quit taking it — a move that doctors strongly warn against.
"I tried to quit June 23 cold
turkey," he says. But going from 120 milligrams of OxyContin
a day to zero left him in severe withdrawal: His legs jerked, his
bowels moved uncontrollably, and he often felt as if he would pass
out. The change was torture.
He had gone from a
white-collar worker with a back problem to a man who felt he
would die without the next dose. "For 2 1/2 days, I was suicidal," he says. "Every
waking minute, I was thinking of ways to kill myself and get
it over with."
The traditional treatment for opiate
addicts, based on scientific research and decades of experience
with heroin addicts, is to mix the painful symptoms of withdrawal
with psychological treatment in rehab centers. People, feeling sick,
sit in meetings designed to help them break bad habits and build
a new life.
But Bernstein insists
that in certain cases, especially when the dependence is physical
and not psychological,
"to tough out your withdrawal is archaic."
Opiates act like a key that goes into
receptors in the brain, unleashing a rush of endorphins. Those endorphins,
amino acids made by the pituitary gland, are the body's natural
painkiller.
After the body has been stimulated
artificially by an opiate to produce endorphins, it does not respond
kindly when that drug no longer turns the process on. |
The
body craves the drug, and without it — in the case of a drug-dependent or
drug-addicted person — the body becomes physically ill.
|
are
you hooked?
|
| A
person may be considered "dependent" on
a substance if three or more of the following characteristics
are present over 12 months:
- Tolerance, needing increased doses.
- Withdrawal, becoming physically ill
when not using the substance.
- Extension, taking the substance over
a longer period of time than intended.
- Failing in efforts to cut down, even
knowing use is causing physical or psychological trouble.
- Spending excessive time getting the
substance or recovering from its effects.
- Giving up professional or social activities
because of substance use.
Source:
American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual of Mental Disorders |
|
At the Waismann clinic,
doctors use a drug called Naltrexone during their procedure,
which they say is different from, and safer than, methods generally
referred to as "rapid detox." Those often use other
drugs, sedate patients instead of putting them to sleep or finish
detoxification in one day instead of two.
"This is not rapid detox,"
Bernstein says. "This is accelerated opiate neuro-regulation.
It's not even in the same league as rapid detox."
The key, he says, is the way Naltrexone
blocks opiates. It binds with the keyhole-like receptors and satisfies
the opiate craving without causing a release of more endorphins.
Unlike methadone, which Bernstein
says is just as addictive as heroin and causes patients simply to
swap one drug addiction for another, Naltrexone can be stopped later
with no ill effects. All patients get psychological counseling to
help them stay clean and sober after they leave the hospital.
Success Rate Promising for
Stable People
One concern is that the in-and-out
nature of the treatment does not adequately prepare the patient
to change his lifestyle or devise strategies to manage future drug-free
challenges.
Clare W. Kavin, executive director
of the Waismann Institute, says that heroin addicts have lower success
rates than people such as Sachs because they sometimes have more
difficult issues back home. The California clinic has treated about
1,000 patients over the past three years. Including the heroin addicts,
the success rate at one year is 66%. In other words, about 660 people
remained opiate-free for a year.
But take out the heroin addicts and
count just those like Sachs, who have a job, a stable life and are
just hooked on pain pills, and the results look more promising.
The clinic is conducting a study of those cases, and after six months
the success rate is 84%.
People like Sachs "just want
their life back," Waismann says. "They don't need 12-step
programs."
What about the high price tag?
"The guy spending $5,000 a month
for pain medication will argue that in two months you have recouped
the investment," Clark says. But what about the addict who
is not rich, famous or otherwise able to come up with $10,000?
"It creates a two-tiered system
where poor people don't have access," Clark says. "That's
the issue."
Bernstein says it's true that not
everybody can afford the care. But he is happy to help those who
can.
"The worst thing
that can happen is we keep them off the medications for a while
and their tolerance comes down to a more reasonable level so
they can take just one Vicodin or
two Vicodin and it will work for their pain," he
says.
'It's Like Being a Baby'
The day Sachs prepared to leave his
Las Vegas home to go to the clinic, he packed up all of the medicine
so he wouldn't be tempted when he came home.
South of Los Angeles, in the nondescript
medical building in Tustin, doctors and nurses checked his lungs
and liver and other bodily systems.
Sachs was nervous, but he knew it
couldn't be worse than trying to kick the drug again on his own.
The staff started an IV, put him to
sleep and flushed the OxyContin out, replacing it with Naltrexone.
When Sachs woke up, the rest was up to him.
"When you first come out of the
treatment, your body doesn't know what's going on," he says.
"There's an emptiness. You feel dizzy and nauseous. I had a
lot of body aches." But he didn't crave the drug.
Back home in Las Vegas, he now works
by phone with a Waismann Institute psychologist.
"It's like being a baby. You
have to learn everything again," Sachs says. "What do
I do to get out of bed?" The drug used to beckon him bright
and early. "Figuring out my new daily routine is the hardest
thing."
"I'm almost back to normal,"
Sachs says. "They saved my life."
But experts such as Jackson who treat
addiction with traditional methods put such patient testimonials
in a broader context. It would take further study, he says, pitting
rapid detox against other methods in a randomized clinical trial,
before anyone knows for sure how rapid
detox works in the long run.
Meanwhile, as baby boomers age and
more people take stronger medicines for higher levels of pain, the
problem of medically induced drug
addiction is expected to continue.
People who are prone to drug abuse but have never known it may find
out when they take a drug such as OxyContin.
For more information, please call (310) 205-0808 or (888) 987-HOPE or send us a confidential email. |