Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Doctors aiming to lower price of naloxone

Overdose reverser key issue for AMA

- By John Keilman

CHICAGO — When the American Medical Associatio­n annual meeting convenes Sunday in Chicago, the powerful physicians’ lobby could push for government interventi­on to lower the price of the heroin overdose-reversing drug naloxone.

A resolution written by a Michigan doctor and three medical students notes the skyrocketi­ng cost of the drug — a two-pack of auto-injecting syringes went from $690 in 2014 to more than $4,000 this year, while other forms of the drug have doubled in price — and calls on legislator­s and regulators to increase public access to affordable naloxone.

“The population I serve often has difficulty affording medication­s for chronic illnesses that they require daily, so the idea that they would be able to purchase an increasing­ly costly overdose reversal medication would certainly be out of the question for them,” said Dr. Gunjan Malhotra, who works in Detroit.

But in a sign of the labyrinthi­ne and confusing world of drug pricing, some Chicago area groups that distribute the antidote say they get it free from the manufactur­ers or at very little cost. Others say they pay dearly.

“It really seems like one of the most important tools (to fight overdoses) is getting naloxone into the hands of as many people as possible; raising prices will not help us,” said Gabriela Zapata-Alma of Thresholds, a mental health agency that pays $250 for a three-dose kit of naloxone that comes in the form of a nasal spray.

Naloxone reverses the effects of a heroin or narcotic painkiller overdose, and as America’s opioid epidemic has exploded over the past 20 years, it has become a front-line defense for people with little or no medical training.

Organizati­ons like the Chicago Recovery Alliance put the drug in the hands of heroin users and their friends and families.

Dan Bigg, head of the alliance, said the group has given out around 300,000 doses over the past 21 years, and that he has received more than 11,000 reports of overdose reversals in that time.

The alliance distribute­s the cheapest form of naloxone — a vial of the drug and a syringe — which Mr. Bigg said he gets at a reduced cost from the manufactur­er.

“Anyone can come to us and get the low-tech, cheapest option,” he said. “I’ve never heard of anyone being too squeamish to use the needle in an emergency.”

Chelsea Laliberte, whose Live4Lali nonprofit does similar naloxone distributi­on in the suburbs and elsewhere in Illinois, said she has been able to get the drug free via drug company grants. But the group is expanding its work this year, and so has begun to pay for naloxone.

She wouldn’t discuss the exact price, but said it was under $20 per dose.

“We’re only willing to pay for what is the most viable, sustainabl­e option, which is a syringe and vials,” she said. “We don’t pay $4,400 a kit for (auto-injectors). I would never do that with anyone’s donation dollars.”

The auto-injector, sold under the brand name Evzio, is made by the drug company Kaleo. The device contains a recording that guides users through the process with voice commands. In a study performed by Kaleo employees, 90 percent of people were able to use the Evzio without training, while no one was able to administer the nasal spray correctly.

Dr. Steven Aks of the Cook County, Ill., Health and Hospitals System said his agency distribute­s naloxone to drug users through emergency rooms and health clinics. Though rising prices have not affected the department’s ability to offer the antidote, he said it could be a different story outside the Chicago area.

“If they’re in a rural area … they’re not going to have the same access,” he said. “If they go to a pharmacy to get a prescripti­on filled, that’s when they’re going to find the sticker shock.”

Those without insurance or a prescripti­on can still buy naloxone at a drugstore. Walgreens said the cash price is $20 for a generic, single-dose vial and syringe, or $40 for a generic nasal spray; CVS said the uninsured pay $45 for a two-dose injectable version and $110 for the Narcanbran­d nasal spray.

According to research, between 2009 and 2015 naloxone prescripti­ons increased from 2.8 million to just 3.2 million, even as opioid overdose deaths rose from 20,000 to 33,000.

The AMA will hold a committee vote on the resolution Sunday.

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