FDA opioids adviser: 'One thing is clear' about the ongoing crisis

Opioid abuse in the U.S. is a crisis, so much so that President Trump declared the epidemic to be a public health emergency under federal law in October 2017 and signed bipartisan legislation to address the issue in October 2018.

Dr. Raeford Brown, a pediatric anesthesia specialist at the UK Kentucky Children’s Hospital and chair of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Advisory Committee on Analgesics and Anesthetics, attributes much of the problem to Big Pharma and shoddy regulation by the FDA itself.

“One thing is clear and that is that the motive of the pharmaceutical industry is to make a profit,” Dr. Brown told Yahoo Finance. “And one would hope that in having that profit noted that there would be due consideration to what is ethical and what is moral.” He added that pharmaceutical companies “put pressure on [doctors] to prescribe opioids for reasons that aren’t indicated and because of that, patients get hurt.”

At the same time, according to Brown, the FDA hasn’t “been doing enough to oversee Big Pharma, and I don’t think that they have for a long time.”

A look at U.S. opioid prescribing rates by county, 2017. Darker means more prescriptions. (Graphic: CDC)
A look at U.S. opioid prescribing rates by county, 2017. Darker means more prescriptions. (Graphic: CDC)

‘Pharmaceutical companies reassured the medical community‘

Although awareness of the opioid crisis has only been gaining traction in recent years, Brown said that the perverse incentive structure behind the epidemic is something that many have been concerned about since the mid-90s.

David Herzberg, associate professor of history at State University of New York at Buffalo, previously described the increasing power of the pharmaceutical industry, which had “kept coming up to the door, knocking on it, and being turned away” until the 1990s.

In 1995, a tipping point of sorts occurred when the FDA approved Oxycodone. To ease worries, “pharmaceutical companies reassured the medical community that patients would not become addicted to prescription opioid pain relievers, and health care providers began to prescribe them at greater rates,” according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse.

“The pharma industry was aware that the [pain management reform] movement existed and put enormous money behind the people pushing for it,” Herzberg told Yahoo Finance. “What you had was an FDA that was told to get out of the way of the industry.”

Between 21-29% of patients who are prescribed opioids for chronic pain misuse them, and between 8-12% develop an opioid use disorder, according to U.S. government data.

FILE - In this Aug. 17, 2018, file photo, family and friends who have lost loved ones to OxyContin and opioid overdoses leave pill bottles in protest outside the headquarters of Purdue Pharma, which is owned by the Sackler family, in Stamford, Conn. A new filing in a Massachusetts case ramps up the legal and financial pressure against the Sackler family, which owns the company that makes OxyContin.  (AP Photo/Jessica Hill, File)
Family and friends who have lost loved ones to OxyContin and opioid overdoses leave pill bottles in protest outside the headquarters of Purdue Pharma, which is owned by the Sackler family, which owns the company that makes OxyContin. (Photo: AP Photo/Jessica Hill)

FDA ‘problematic in their regulation of opioids’

Brown has served as the chair of the FDA Advisory Committee on Anesthetic and Analgesic Drug Products since July 2016. During that time, he said, he’s had many interactions with the principals at the FDA.