Tag Archives: Opioid

Higher buprenorphine doses associated with improved retention in treatment for opioid use disorder | National Institute on Drug Abuse – National Institute on Drug Abuse

  1. Higher buprenorphine doses associated with improved retention in treatment for opioid use disorder | National Institute on Drug Abuse National Institute on Drug Abuse
  2. Larger dose of existing medication eyed as response to fentanyl Washington Examiner
  3. What you need to know about a new type of synthetic opioids The Morning Call
  4. New study suggests higher buprenorphine doses could help save lives News-Medical.Net
  5. Higher buprenorphine doses associated with improved retention in treatment for opioid use disorder National Institutes of Health (.gov)
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Father speaks out after 1-year-old son dies of suspected Opioid exposure at Bronx daycare – Eyewitness News ABC7NY

  1. Father speaks out after 1-year-old son dies of suspected Opioid exposure at Bronx daycare Eyewitness News ABC7NY
  2. Devastated Bronx dad ‘never expected’ 1-year-old son to die of suspected day care fentanyl overdose; center ‘looked like a nice place’ Yahoo! Voices
  3. Bronx daycare owner and accomplice head to court to face murder charges in suspected fentanyl death of boy, 1 New York Daily News
  4. 2 people arrested after suspected exposure to opioids at Bronx day care leaves 1-year-old dead and 3 children hospitalized CNN
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‘Every Family Needs It’ Narcan, lifesaving opioid overdose medication, now available over the counter – NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth

  1. ‘Every Family Needs It’ Narcan, lifesaving opioid overdose medication, now available over the counter NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth
  2. Analysis | Over-the-counter Narcan may have less impact than meets the eye The Washington Post
  3. ‘Gamechanger’ in the U.S. opioid crisis: Narcan now available for purchase in drug stores NBC 10 Philadelphia
  4. Narcan availability expands to local grocery stores next week News Channel 5 Nashville
  5. Narcan is now available over-the-counter: cost, where to find it and how it works The Washington Post
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FDA clears Braeburn’s long-acting Brixadi to treat opioid use disorder – FiercePharma

  1. FDA clears Braeburn’s long-acting Brixadi to treat opioid use disorder FiercePharma
  2. FDA Approves Braeburn’s Brixadi Injection to Treat Moderate-to-Severe Opioid Use Disorder Pharmacy Times
  3. Braeburn’s BRIXADI™ (buprenorphine) Extended-Release Subcutaneous Injection (CIII) Receives FDA Approval for Moderate to Severe Opioid Use Disorder PR Newswire
  4. Indivior’s Opvee crosses FDA finish line, adding new overdose rescue option amid raging opioid epidemic FiercePharma
  5. FDA Approves Buprenorphine Injection for Opioid Use Disorder Medscape
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New nasal spray to reverse fentanyl and other opioid overdoses gets FDA approval – Yahoo! Voices

  1. New nasal spray to reverse fentanyl and other opioid overdoses gets FDA approval Yahoo! Voices
  2. Decision made on RX nasal spray for opioid overdoses WJW FOX 8 News Cleveland
  3. New overdose antidote approved, but concerns raised about cost, side effects The Washington Post
  4. Indivior’s Opvee crosses FDA finish line, adding new overdose rescue option amid raging opioid epidemic FiercePharma
  5. Braeburn’s BRIXADI™ (buprenorphine) Extended-Release Subcutaneous Injection (CIII) Receives FDA Approval for Moderate to Severe Opioid Use Disorder PR Newswire
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Buprenorphine initiation in the ER found safe and effective for individuals with opioid use disorder who use fentanyl – National Institutes of Health (.gov)

  1. Buprenorphine initiation in the ER found safe and effective for individuals with opioid use disorder who use fentanyl National Institutes of Health (.gov)
  2. COVID-Era Telehealth Appointments Linked to Fewer Fatal Opioid Overdoses Medpage Today
  3. Telehealth Services Tied to a Major Reduction in Overdose Deaths Medscape
  4. Increased use of telehealth services and medications for opioid use disorder during the COVID-19 pandemic associated with reduced risk for fatal overdose National Institutes of Health (.gov)
  5. Used After Opioid Overdose, Anti-Addiction Drug Can Cut Odds for Fatal OD Inside NoVA
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Increased use of telehealth services and medications for opioid use disorder during the COVID-19 pandemic associated with reduced risk for fatal overdose – nih.gov

  1. Increased use of telehealth services and medications for opioid use disorder during the COVID-19 pandemic associated with reduced risk for fatal overdose nih.gov
  2. Telehealth Services Tied to a Major Reduction in Overdose Deaths Medscape
  3. Used After Opioid Overdose, Anti-Addiction Drug Can Cut Odds for Fatal OD U.S. News & World Report
  4. Buprenorphine initiation in the ER found safe and effective for individuals with opioid use disorder who use fentanyl nih.gov
  5. Increased Use of Telehealth Services and Medications for Opioid Use Disorder During the COVID-19 Pandemic Associated with Reduced Risk for Fatal Overdose | CDC Online Newsroom CDC
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Walmart to Pay $3.1 Billion to Settle Opioid Lawsuits

Walmart Inc.

WMT 7.24%

has agreed to pay $3.1 billion to settle opioid-crisis lawsuits brought by several U.S. states and municipalities, adding to a landmark settlement with rival pharmacy chains.

The agreement resolves a collection of lawsuits brought by states, cities and Native American tribes. Earlier this month,

CVS Health Corp.

CVS 1.08%

and

Walgreens

WBA 1.75%

Boots Alliance Inc. agreed to pay roughly $5 billion apiece to settle the lawsuits. The companies didn’t admit wrongdoing in their deals.

The Walmart agreement was announced the same morning that the retail giant reported its latest quarterly results. The company said it took $3.3 billion in charges in the last quarter related to opioid settlements.

Walmart reported stronger-than-expected sales in the October-ended quarter and raised sales and profit goals for the year, signs the big discount chain is drawing in shoppers despite high inflation. Walmart shares rose over 8% in midmorning trading.

Each state, local government and tribe will need to decide whether to participate in the settlement. Plaintiff’s attorneys that lead negotiations are encouraging them to do so, saying the payments hold the pharmacies accountable for their alleged roles in the opioid abuse.

Walmart said that it strongly disputes allegations made in the lawsuits and that the settlement isn’t an admission of liability. The company said its settlement payments will reach communities faster than other deals. CVS is paying out over 10 years, and Walgreens over 15 years.

Walmart has roughly half as many locations as either CVS or Walgreens, which combined have roughly 19,000 U.S. drugstores. Walmart has faced scrutiny from the federal government related to how it prescribed opioids.

The Justice Department filed a lawsuit in December 2020 over its alleged role in the opioid crisis, claiming Walmart sought to boost profits by understaffing its pharmacies and pressuring employees to fill prescriptions quickly. The settlement with the states doesn’t cover the federal case, which Walmart has sought to have dismissed.

The Justice Department sued Walmart a few months after the company had pre-emptively sued the federal government, saying the Justice Department and Drug Enforcement Administration were attempting to scapegoat the company for their failings. Walmart’s suit was dismissed in February 2021. Walmart appealed the dismissal, but lost that case late last year.

Opioid abuse has claimed more than half a million lives and triggered more than 3,000 lawsuits by governments, hospitals and others against players in the pharmaceutical industry, including manufacturers, distributors and drugstores.

The fact that Walmart will pay out funds almost immediately rather than over a decade or more “is particularly noteworthy considering that Walmart dispensed fewer opioids, and at lower dosages, than the other pharmacy defendants,” said lawyer

Paul Geller,

of Robbins Geller, a who is representing local communities.

Write to Sharon Terlep at sharon.terlep@wsj.com and Sarah Nassauer at Sarah.Nassauer@wsj.com

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Fentanyl Vaccine Breakthrough – Potential “Game Changer” for Opioid Epidemic

Researchers report the breakthrough discovery of a new vaccine that targets the dangerous synthetic opioid fentanyl. It can block fentanyl’s ability to enter the brain, thus eliminating the drug’s “high.”

Study suggests new vaccine could prevent deadly opioid from entering the brain.

A new vaccine has been developed that targets the dangerous synthetic opioid fentanyl that could block its ability to enter the brain, thus eliminating the drug’s “high.” The breakthrough discovery could have major implications for the nation’s opioid epidemic by becoming a relapse prevention agent for people trying to quit using opioids. While research reveals Opioid Use Disorder (OUD) is treatable, an estimated 80% of those dependent on the drug suffer a relapse. The vaccine was developed by a research team led by the University of Houston.

Published recently in the journal Pharmaceutics, the findings could not be timelier or more in demand: Over 150 people die every day from overdoses of synthetic opioids including fentanyl, which is 50 times stronger than heroin and 100 times stronger than morphine. Consumption of about 2 milligrams of fentanyl (the size of two grains of rice) is likely to be fatal depending on a person’s size.

Colin Haile, University of Houston research associate professor of psychology and the Texas Institute for Measurement, Evaluation and Statistics (TIMES), and a founding member of the UH Drug Discovery Institute. Haile is reporting a breakthrough fentanyl vaccine that could be a “game changer” in opioid addiction. Credit: University of Houston

“We believe these findings could have a significant impact on a very serious problem plaguing society for years – opioid misuse. Our vaccine is able to generate anti-fentanyl antibodies that bind to the consumed fentanyl and prevent it from entering the brain, allowing it to be eliminated out of the body via the kidneys. Thus, the individual will not feel the euphoric effects and can ‘get back on the wagon’ to sobriety,” said the study’s lead author Colin Haile, a research associate professor of psychology at UH and the Texas Institute for Measurement, Evaluation and Statistics (TIMES), and a founding member of the UH Drug Discovery Institute.

In another positive finding, the vaccine did not cause any adverse side effects in the immunized rats involved in lab studies. The team plans to start manufacturing clinical-grade vaccine in the coming months with clinical trials in humans planned soon.

Fentanyl is an especially dangerous threat because it is often added to street drugs like cocaine, methamphetamine and other opioids, such as oxycodone and hydrocodone/acetaminophen pills, and even to counterfeit benzodiazepines like Xanax. These counterfeit drugs laced with fentanyl add to the amount of fentanyl overdoses in individuals who do not ordinarily consume opioids.

In the lab: Therese Kosten, professor of psychology and director of the Developmental, Cognitive & Behavioral Neuroscience program and Colin Haile, research associate professor of psychology and the Texas Institute for Measurement, Evaluation and Statistics (TIMES), and a founding member of the UH Drug Discovery Institute. Credit: University of Houston

“The anti-fentanyl antibodies were specific to fentanyl and a fentanyl derivative and did not cross-react with other opioids, such as morphine. That means a vaccinated person would still be able to be treated for pain relief with other opioids,” said Haile.

The vaccine tested contains an adjuvant derived from E. coli named dmLT. An adjuvant molecule boosts the immune system’s response to vaccines, a critical component for the effectiveness of anti-addiction vaccines. The adjuvant was developed by collaborators at the Tulane University School of Medicine and has proven vital to the efficacy of the vaccine. Also on the team are Greg Cuny, Joseph P. & Shirley Shipman Buckley Endowed Professor of Drug Discovery at the UH College of Pharmacy along with researchers from Baylor College of Medicine and Michael E. DeBakey Veteran’s Affairs Medical Center.

Current treatments for OUD are methadone, buprenorphine and naltrexone, and their effectiveness depends upon formulation, compliance, access to medications and the specific misused opioid.

Therese Kosten, professor of psychology and director of the Developmental, Cognitive & Behavioral Neuroscience program at UH, calls the new vaccine a potential “game changer.”

“Fentanyl use and overdose is a particular treatment challenge that is not adequately addressed with current medications because of its pharmacodynamics and managing acute overdose with the short-acting naloxone is not appropriately effective as multiple doses of naloxone are often needed to reverse fentanyl’s fatal effects,” said Kosten, senior author of the study.

Reference: “An Immunconjugate Vaccine Alters Distribution and Reduces the Antinociceptive, Behavioral and Physiological Effects of Fentanyl in Male and Female Rats” by Colin N. Haile, Miah D. Baker, Sergio A. Sanchez, Carlos A. Lopez Arteaga, Anantha L. Duddupudi, Gregory D. Cuny, Elizabeth B. Norton, Thomas R. Kosten and Therese A. Kosten, 26 October 2022, Pharmaceutics.
DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics14112290

The study was funded by the Department of Defense through the Alcohol and Substance Abuse Disorders Program managed by RTI International’s Pharmacotherapies for Alcohol and Substance Use Disorders Alliance, which has funded Haile’s lab for several years to develop the anti-fentanyl vaccine.



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CVS and Walgreens Near $10 Billion Deal to Settle Opioid Cases – The New York Times

  1. CVS and Walgreens Near $10 Billion Deal to Settle Opioid Cases The New York Times
  2. CVS Health reaches settlement in opioid epidemic KENS 5: Your San Antonio News Source
  3. CVS and Walgreens agree to $10 billion in tentative deals on opioid cases. Walmart will also reportedly settle CNN
  4. Walgreens, CVS, Walmart in $12B opioid settlement • VillageMD may grow by buying rival • Silver Cross, UChicago neuroscience deal Crain’s Chicago Business
  5. CVS, Walgreens to Pay More Than $10 Billion to Settle Opioid Lawsuits The Wall Street Journal
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