Title: A Question of Balance
1A Question of Balance
2WHO Principle of Balance
- The regulation of medications, meant to decrease
misuse should not interfere with the legitimate
treatment of pain
3Question
- Why is Health Canada adopting a position on
scheduling of tramadol which is inconsistent with
US, Germany, Australia, UK and Switzerland?
4Health Canadas Positions on Tramadol
- Greater risk of abuse and diversion of single
entity products vs. combination products
containing acetaminophen. - High dose single entity products will be chewed,
or crushed snorted to a greater extent than
multiple, low dose, single entity products. - Information sources" that show increase of abuse
in the US and other countries. - Tramadol will be subject to more abuse in Canada
vs. other countries where it has been marketed.
5Health Canadas Positions on Tramadol
- Scheduling of tramadol will have no negative
effect on patient care. - Stakeholder views (and materials presented to HC)
have been considered. - All data has been considered, leading to
conclusion that an Expert Advisory Committee is
not warranted.
6No one in his/her right mind would abuse a
combination compound
7Abused Opioids of Choice in Canada
- heroin, morphine, methadone, dilaudid, T3/4,
oxycodone - morphine, T3/4, oxycodone, dilaudid, Percocet,
methadone, heroin - Percocet, T3/4, morphine, oxycodone, dilaudid,
heroin, methadone - heroin, dilaudid, methadone, morphine, Percocet,
T3/4, oxycodone - dilaudid, oxycodone, morphine, heroin, T3/4,
methadone - dilaudid, oxycodone, T3/4, morphine, Percocet,
methadone - dilaudid, T3/4, Percocet, oxycodone, morphine,
heroin
- Vancouver
- Edmonton
- Toronto
- Montreal
- Quebec
- Fredericton
- Saint John
Fischer B et al. CMAJ 2006 175(11)1385-1387
8Tramadol might be part of the solution rather
than the problem
- Appropriate substitute for Tyl 3 and in some
cases Percocet - Safer than long-term NSAIDs / COXIBs
9Higher Dose Concerns
- June 7, 2007 Ministers letter to Dr. Jovey
high dose, single entity.it is our view that
the risk of abuse and potential for diversion
warrant scheduling under CDSA. - There has always been the opportunity to consume
several low dose tablets (eg.100mg x 4 1 x
400mg). However, worldwide data does not
demonstrate this. - 400 mg single entity available in Belgium,
Denmark, Germany, Luxembourg, Netherlands,
Portugal, Spain, Sweden, UK, US.no extra
controls apply. - WHO Expert Committee considered higher dose,
single entity tramadol in concluding tramadol
should not be scheduled
10Worldwide Data
11Worldwide Abuse/Dependence Reporting Rates and
Tramadol Consumption 1980 to 2005
Source Grünenthal Drug Safety Database
12Canadians are more likely to abuse tramadol than
other countries ?
- If anything, the existing data (Cicero) on other
opioids shows that Canadian abuse rates are
slightly less or equal to those of the U.S. - For H.C. to suggest we are more likely to abuse
tramadol must mean they have some evidence that
they are not sharing!
13Commonly abused Rx in Canada
- Gravol misused / abused as a sedative
- Dextromethorphan abused by teens
- Ventolin inhalers are being abused!
- Where do we draw the line??
14Tramadol Metabolism
- Tramadols opioid effect comes primarily from
the M1 metabolite which has an affinity for mu
opioid receptors similar to that of codeine - M1 is mostly formed by liver metabolism and has a
delayed appearance in the blood - ? not appealing to addicts
15Tramadol iv / snorted / smoked?
- The amount of tramadol in the blood will far
exceed the amount of M1 - ? less euphoria for the dose taken
- ? higher risk of seizure
- ?Also not appealing to abusers
16Comparison of Abuse Liability of Tramadol,
NSAIDs, and Hydrocodone in Patients with Chronic
Pain
- Evidence of abuse at 12 month follow-up
equivalent to that for NSAIDS - NSAIDS 2.5 (n 4039)
- Tramadol 2.7 (n 4222)
- Hydrocodone 4.9 (n 3145)
- Adams et. al JPSM 2006
17- The scheduling of a substance may lead to
significant barriers to its availability as a
medicine.
WHO Expert Committee on Drug Dependence, 34th
Report. 2006
18Impact of Tramadol Scheduling International
Examples
Tramadol (INN) units in Egypt before, during
scheduling, and after de-scheduling
Tramadol (INN) units in Jordan before and after
scheduling
Scheduled in 2000
Scheduled December 2002
De-Scheduled May 2004
Source IMS
Source IMS
19The Impact of Scheduling
- Perception that the drug is more addictive and
prescribing is being monitored, therefore
reluctance to prescribe - esp. family physicians, surgeons
- Triplicate status discourages use
- Special Rx pad, College monitoring
- Other more problematic drugs will be prescribed
instead (Tyl 3) -
20Expert Position on Tramadol Based on Science and
Data
- ? availability ? ? abuse (less abuse over time)
- No evidence high dose use ? risk of abuse
- Metabolism M1 limits i.v. / i.n. abuse
attractiveness - No evidence long-term use ? risk of abuse
- Scheduling does impact prescribing and
therefore patient care
21Abuse of Rx Analgesics
- Scheduling currently does not seem to affect
abuse of other opioid analgesics, therefore it is
very unlikely to affect the already low risk of
tramadol abuse - The only predictable effect will be less
prescribing for legitimate patients
22Rx Analgesic Abuse - Solutions
- Education not regulation
- We are teaching MDs to risk stratify patients and
prescribe treatments accordingly - We need a palette of treatments for the problem
of pain - Telling MDs that the risk of tramadol is
equivalent to that of morphine, fentanyl,
methadone flies in the face of this strategy - Regulations need to stay in line with best
practices if we are to optimize outcome and
minimize harm.
23Rx Analgesic Abuse - Solutions
- Monitoring
- Continue current monitoring programs and act on
results if required - Requires cooperation of all stakeholders
government, law enforcement, addiction programs,
etc - ? National online, real-time data for physicians
?
24- Men stumble over the truth from time to time, but
most pick themselves up and hurry off as if
nothing happened - Winston Churchill