October 22, 2021

Manchin Urges FDA To Require Training For Healthcare Professionals Prescribing Opioids To Combat Drug Epidemic That Killed More Than 94K Americans Last Year

Charleston, WV – This week, U.S. Senator Joe Manchin (D-WV) led his colleagues in urging the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to require healthcare professionals who prescribe opioids to complete mandatory training programs, similar to the trainings healthcare professionals who prescribe medications to treat substance use disorder must complete.
 
Currently, the FDA requires healthcare professionals to complete mandatory education trainings in order to prescribe medications to treat substance use disorder. However, healthcare professionals prescribing opioids, which were involved in nearly 75% of overdose deaths in the last year, are not required to take mandatory education courses offered by entities that sponsor opioids for approval by the FDA. While opioid dispensing has decreased in recent years, there were still more than 153 million opioid prescriptions filled in 2019—enough for nearly two-thirds of adults to have a bottle of painkillers. As recently as 2018, hydrocodone-based opioids were the single most commonly prescribed medication in 10 states.
 
The Senators said in part, “We have urged FDA for years to apply its enhanced safety framework as a mandatory form of education for opioid prescribers…To date, the FDA’s REMS has only required that sponsors of opioids make an education program available to prescribers. This hands-off approach has been insufficient to prevent inappropriate prescribing, misuse, and abuse of opioids…While we acknowledge and commend the FDA for important steps it has undertaken in recent years to extend its REMS program to immediate release opioids and remove certain products from the market, we believe the current regulatory oversight for opioid prescribing fails to meet the ongoing risks posed to public health.”
 
Last year was the deadliest on record for drug related overdose deaths. In 2020, 1,386 West Virginians died from drug related overdoses and 94,498 Americans died from drug related overdoses.
 
“After years of deceptive promotion from the pharmaceutical industry that mischaracterized the risks and benefits of opioids, it is essential that today’s prescribers have the most recent understanding about appropriate prescribing practices, pain management, and prevention and treatment of addiction… Continuing a system of voluntary prescriber education for addictive opioids would ignore the reality of: the ongoing promotion by pharmaceutical sales representatives of prescription painkillers; how individuals get hooked on heroin and fentanyl; and the shortcomings of the current preventive regulatory framework. We appreciate the FDA’s actions to reconsider its REMS program to make opioid prescriber education mandatory, and we urge the FDA to finally implement this public health policy,” the Senators continued.
 
Combatting the drug epidemic in West Virginia continues to be one of Senator Manchin’s top priorities. Earlier this year, Senator Manchin reintroduced nine bills to address the growing drug epidemic and continues to advocate for funding and resources to support prevention and treatment services in the Mountain State. A timeline of Senator Manchin’s efforts to address the opioid crisis can be found here.
 
Senator Manchin was joined by U.S. Senators Dick Durban (D-IL) and Richard Blumenthal (D-CT).

The letter can be read in full below or click here.

As part of the Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) ongoing efforts to combat the worsening opioid epidemic, we write to express our support for the agency’s renewed consideration of mandatory prescriber education for opioids, including as part of a Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy (REMS).
 
Last year was the deadliest year for drug overdoses in America’s history. We know that the opioid epidemic was fueled by the sheer number of opioid painkillers that are manufactured, prescribed, and dispensed in the United States—with four out of five new heroin users starting their addiction with prescription opioids.  While opioid dispensing has decreased in recent years, there were still more than 153 million opioid prescriptions filled in 2019—enough for nearly two-thirds of adults to have a bottle of painkillers. As recently as 2018, hydrocodone-based opioids were the single most commonly prescribed medication in 10 states.
 
We have urged FDA for years to apply its enhanced safety framework as a mandatory form of education for opioid prescribers.  The FDA’s Drug Safety and Risk Management (DSaRM) Advisory Committee and the Anesthetic and Analgesic Drug Products Advisory Committee (AADPAC) have also voted against voluntary education and training for opioid prescribers, with many members expressing support for a mandatory program.  While we acknowledge and commend the FDA for important steps it has undertaken in recent years to extend its REMS program to immediate release opioids and remove certain products from the market, we believe the current regulatory oversight for opioid prescribing fails to meet the ongoing risks posed to public health.
 
To date, the FDA’s REMS has only required that sponsors of opioids make an education program available to prescribers.  This hands-off approach has been insufficient to prevent inappropriate prescribing, misuse, and abuse of opioids. Alarmingly, only 354,949 prescribers completed the REMS opioid continuing education courses over the past 9 years—compared to approximately 1 million licensed opioid prescribers in a given year.  It makes no sense that health professionals have needed to undergo hours of mandatory training to prescribe buprenorphine or other FDA-approved treatments for opioid use disorder, when there is no mandatory training required for the very opioids that caused such addiction in the first place.  What’s clear is that FDA’s voluntary approach to date does not meet the challenge.
 
After years of deceptive promotion from the pharmaceutical industry that mischaracterized the risks and benefits of opioids, it is essential that today’s prescribers have the most recent understanding about appropriate prescribing practices, pain management, and prevention and treatment of addiction.  Thankfully, in recent years, new research and data—including from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ)—have underscored improved guidelines and responsible opioid prescribing considerations.  We believe it is essential that all opioid prescribers across America have this important and renewed educational understanding, and as part of a move to mandatory opioid prescriber education, we urge FDA to update its REMS curriculum and educational content to reflect the latest understandings and evidence from CDC and AHRQ.
 
Continuing a system of voluntary prescriber education for addictive opioids would ignore the reality of: the ongoing promotion by pharmaceutical sales representatives of prescription painkillers; how individuals get hooked on heroin and fentanyl; and the shortcomings of the current preventive regulatory framework. We appreciate the FDA’s actions to reconsider its REMS program to make opioid prescriber education mandatory, and we urge the FDA to finally implement this public health policy.