“My experience is not one of getting high, but…

“My experience is not one of getting high, but…

“My experience is not one of getting high, but one of feeling calm and not thinking about the pain.”

Beyond opioids, a new era in pain treatment

A year and a half ago, Jerry started the pain-management routine that has changed his life.

At his home in a Fairfield County suburb, he takes a vitamin-sized capsule of cannabis oil every day, around 9 a.m.

The tablet takes a few hours to work on the pain that courses through his legs, an ongoing symptom of his arachnoiditis — a pain disorder caused by the inflammation of a membrane that surrounds the spinal cord’s nerves.

While he waits for the medicine to work, he settles into his favorite living room chair with a cup of coffee and watches the “Today” show with his wife and three rescue dogs.

A few hours later, when he heads out for a meeting with one of the nonprofit boards he sits on, he is not focusing on the pain. After once suffering so much discomfort that he turned to illicit painkillers, the improvement is a breakthrough.

“Cannabis is medically real,” Jerry, 64, said in an interview at his home. “I’m a standing, living example of that.Jerry plays with his pet dogs, who were rescued from area shelters, at his Bridgeport-area home, on Tuesday, Nov. 21, 2017. Photo: Brian A. Pounds / Hearst Connecticut Media / Connecticut Post

Photo: Brian A. Pounds / Hearst Connecticut Media

Jerry plays with his pet dogs, who were rescued from area shelters, at his Bridgeport-area home, on Tuesday, Nov. 21, 2017.

His regimen reflects a new era of pain management. Alarmed by the epidemic of opioid abuse that has killed tens of thousands of Americans in recent years, medical professionals are rethinking how they treat pain. They no longer turn first to prescription opioids.

Instead, an array of new treatments such as medical marijuana are emerging, alternatives that are widely seen as carrying less risk of abuse and addiction than medical narcotics. Pre-emptive, long-lasting nerve blocks and other analgesics during surgery are becoming common. New pain drugs on the horizon include CR845, an anti-inflammatory product being developed by Stamford’s Cara Therapeutics, just down the street from Purdue Pharma, maker of the now-infamous OxyContin.

Spurred by a growing body of research and a diminishing social stigma, marijuana has gained particular traction as a medical alternative to treating pain.

Angela D'Amico is the owner of Compassionate Care Center in Bethel, the sole medical marijuana dispensary currently operating in Fairfield County. Photo: Carol Kaliff / Hearst Connecticut Media / The News-Times

Photo: Carol Kaliff / Hearst Connecticut Media

Compassionate Care Center in Bethel, where Jerry procures his cannabis, comprises one of nine medical marijuana dispensaries in Connecticut and the only one in Fairfield County. Its patient base has grown tenfold since its September 2014 opening to some 3,000.

“We’re all pioneers in this,” said CCC owner Angela D’Amico. “We’re really setting the path for this whole industry. Connecticut is the first state with a pharmaceutical model for medical marijuana. Just like the medication you buy at CVS, all our products have manufacturers’ labels.”

Getting sober

Jerry’s personal pain journey mirrors the rise and fall of opioids and the recent shift to alternative pain treatments. He agreed to share his story on the condition that certain personal details, such as his last name and hometown, not be disclosed.

Before starting the medical marijuana, Jerry had experienced decades of treatment of his arachnoiditis, with varying degrees of success. The condition likely emerged from failed back surgery he underwent in the late 1970s and primarily affects his legs.

By the mid 1990s, Jerry’s pain escalated to the point that he had to quit his job as a fire and arson investigator for a major insurance company. He could not get enough prescribed opioids to dull his discomfort, so he resorted to buying unprescribed painkillers, like Percocet. The pain also pushed him to drink more.

Jerry got sober about 20 years ago — he says he has not taken a drink or an unprescribed pill since then.

He initially looked skeptically at medical marijuana because he feared it would undermine his sobriety. But the support of his pain-management doctor, wife and then-AA sponsor convinced him the treatment deserved a try.

Pain and weakness still require him to use crutches to get around, but he can enjoy activities such as swimming with his dogs. He also travels; he did most of the driving on a trip he and his wife took in October to Myrtle Beach, S.C.

Jerry said he has not become addicted to the marijuana. Being clear-headed is crucial to him serving on the boards of Connecticut’s Beardsley Zoo and the social-service agency Recovery Network of Programs. The type that Jerry and other CCC patients take is not addictive because it works on non-opioid nerve receptors, according to D’Amico.

A syringe filled with medical-grade cannabis oil and a filled capsule are shown at Jerry’s Bridgeport-area home on Tuesday, Nov. 21, 2017. Photo: Brian A. Pounds / Hearst Connecticut Media / Connecticut Post

Photo: Brian A. Pounds / Hearst Connecticut Media

A syringe filled with medical-grade cannabis oil and a filled capsule are shown at Jerry’s Bridgeport-area home on Tuesday, Nov. 21, 2017.

“You could not be a (board) secretary of a $30 million corporation (RNP), if you were stoned; it’s not the pot I used to know from college,” Jerry said. “My experience is not one of getting high, but one of feeling calm and not thinking about the pain.”

Insurance generally does not cover treatment with cannabis, and treatment provided by CCC can run between $250 and $1,500 per month. But CCC offers many discounts. In some cases, it covers all costs for terminally ill patients who are struggling financially.

Rethinking pain management

Use of opioids such as OxyContin, from Purdue Pharma, has tapered off in recent years as medical professionals have become more aware of their risks. The amount of opioids prescribed in the U.S. peaked in 2010 and then dropped each year through 2015, according to data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. But the 2015 prescribing rate still ran at more than triple the 1999 rate.

The growing wariness of opioids has created an opening for competitors.

A block away from Purdue’s headquarters at 201 Tresser Blvd., Cara Therapeutics is working on a drug that could challenge the dominance of OxyContin.

Cara’s first product is an anti-pain and anti-inflammatory drug named CR845. It would treat conditions including hip and knee pain.

CR845 would represent a more powerful pain treatment than over-the-counter medications such as Advil, but it would prevent addiction because it would not act on the brain, said Cara CEO Derek Chalmers.

Derek Chalmers is CEO of Cara Therapeutics, a Stamford-based biotech firm that is developing new drugs to treat acute and chronic pain that aim to reduce the risk of addiction, by not acting on the body’s central nervous system. Photo: Michael Cummo / Hearst Connecticut Media / Stamford Advocate

Photo: Michael Cummo / Hearst Connecticut Media

Derek Chalmers is CEO of Cara Therapeutics, a Stamford-based biotech firm that is developing new drugs to treat acute and chronic pain that aim to reduce the risk of addiction, by not acting on the body’s central nervous system.

“By shutting down the nerve activity at the site of injury, it can produce … anti-inflammatory activity in the absence of a central nervous system brain effect, so you don’t induce euphoria at all,” Chalmers said in an interview at the firm’s headquarters at 107 Elm St. “The drug is entirely non-addicting.”

Cara aims to file its first new drug application with the FDA within the next two years.

Purdue officials cite efforts to diversify their pain-relief products beyond OxyContin. Among ongoing initiatives, the company has partnered with biotech firm AnaBios to research alternatives to opioids and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs.

Striking a balance

Lawmakers in several states including Connecticut have moved to stanch the flow of narcotics by enacting new restrictions. The General Assembly last year passed legislation that generally prohibits medical practitioners from writing opioid prescriptions for more than seven days to minors, or adults who are taking the drugs for the first time.

But doctors warn against overregulation.

“We’ve got to be very careful that legislative efforts that try to deal with the opioid epidemic don’t turn into window dressing about how many pills can be prescribed at a time,” said Dr. Jeffrey Gordon, immediate past president of the Connecticut State Medical Society. “That doesn’t get to the root of the problem. We want people who have legitimate pain, as assessed by their doctors, to be able to get the medications, such as opioids, that they might need.”

In hospitals and medical offices, doctors are increasingly turning to alternative pain treatments that can offer patients as much relief as opioids while greatly reducing their risk of addiction. At Stamford Hospital, nerve-block treatments were used last year in 79 percent of orthopedic procedures and 75 percent of other operating-room procedures.

“If you do pre-emptive analgesia, that’s one of the most important things to do,” said Dr. Betty Ann Robustelli, the hospital’s chairwoman of anesthesia. “The nerves aren’t fired up, and it really reduces the post-op pain you see in a lot of cases.”

Dr. Paul Sethi, a Greenwich based-surgeon at Orthopaedic and Neurosurgery Specialists, said about half of his patients who undergo shoulder surgeries with a new novocaine derivative injected during surgery are not requiring any post-operative opioids. The other half need significantly fewer narcotics than they would have needed typically without the local anesthetic, called Exparel. The treatment can keep the surgical area numb for three to four days, the period of most intense pain following surgery, he said.

Dr. Betty Ann Robustelli, center, and Dr. Juliet Jackson use an ultrasound machine inside Stamford Hospital in Stamford, Conn., on Jan. 16, 2017. The machine helps anesthesiologists deliver numbing agents more efficiently and safely. Photo: Michael Cummo / Hearst Connecticut Media / Stamford Advocate

Photo: Michael Cummo / Hearst Connecticut Media

Dr. Betty Ann Robustelli, center, and Dr. Juliet Jackson use an ultrasound machine inside Stamford Hospital in Stamford, Conn., on Jan. 16, 2017. The machine helps anesthesiologists deliver numbing agents more efficiently and safely.

“My patients are my teammates in their care,” Sethi said. “I have patients who come in and say ‘I don’t want to want to take these opioid medications.’ And I say ‘OK, let’s talk about it, and let’s explore different alternatives.’”

Effective responses will not necessarily erase pain or eliminate opioids. When Jerry occasionally experiences “breakthrough” severe pain, he might take a morphine pill. His other treatments include a pump implanted in his side that dispenses minor amounts of morphine to his spine.

Dr. Paul Sethi is an orthopedic surgeon at the ONS practice in Greenwich, Conn. Sethi and his partners are increasingly using non-opioid approaches to treat post-surgical pain. Photo: Keelin Daly / For Hearst Connecticut Media / Greenwich Time Freelance

Photo: Keelin Daly / For Hearst Connecticut Media

Dr. Paul Sethi is an orthopedic surgeon at the ONS practice in Greenwich, Conn. Sethi and his partners are increasingly using non-opioid approaches to treat post-surgical pain.

But his opioid use represents a small fraction of his one-time intake. His face brightens when he reflects on his progress.

“After 20-some-odd years of being in bone-crunching pain, not having pain significant enough to remember is big,” he said. “If I don’t think about it, I’m in good shape. I can live again.”

pschott@scni.com; 203-964-2236; twitter: @paulschott

retrieved from: http://www.stamfordadvocate.com/business/article/A-NEW-ERA-IN-PAIN-TREATMENT-12396310.php#photo-14629431

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