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Controlling Addiction With Prescription Drugs: Broward Takes Stock Of Vivitrol Use

Vivitrol is the injectible form of the generic drug called Naltrexone. It can cost between $1,100 and $1,600 for a one-month dose.
Caitie Switalski
/
WLRN
Vivitrol is the injectible form of the generic drug called Naltrexone. It can cost between $1,100 and $1,600 for a one-month dose.

Enrique Martinez was dripping water when he walked into Fifth Street Counseling Center, in Plantation, on a Tuesday evening last July.  

Summer in South Florida usually means rain and it was pouring rain that afternoon while he commuted from the sober home in Margate where he has been living to his monthly appointment at the clinic. It takes him over an hour to get there. First, he takes a bus and then he finishes the trip on his bike. 

Martinez has sought treatment for opiates and meth at least four times during the last decade. His cravings used to wake him up if he hadn't used recently enough. He said the effort it takes to get to Fifth Street is well worth it for him. 

"I've never been able to get more than 90 days [clean], so this is...now I'm coming up on six months," he said. 

Martinez came to the clinic to receive his fifth shot of Vivitrol in the last five months. 

"It's just...I don't feel turned on by drugs as much," he said. "It normally is like a constant, especially in early recovery, it's a constant thing that's in my mind, it's like, pestering me."

Vivitrol is a medication used to treat opioid addiction. It's a monthly shot that reduces cravings for opioid drugs by blocking the receptors in the brain that absorb them. It gets injected into the butt muscle once a month. It can only be administered by a physician. 

Vivitrol has been approved by the Federal Drug Administration to treat addiction since 2006, but it is only recently that Broward County has added it to its tools to help drug addicts drop the habit.

Broward started using the medication in its treatment programs just in January of this year - close to eight months ago. County officials had been trying to secure funding for the drug for several years as opioid overdose deaths in Broward rise. Those deaths doubled two years ago in the county. 

At the start of the new fiscal year this July, funding for Broward's Vivitrol programs was renewed.

But Vivitrol is a brand name for the cheaper generic drug that comes in pill-form, called Naltrexone.

"The big drawback is the cost," said Dr. Dale Fahie, medical director at  Broward County's Addiction and Recovery Center (BARC). 

Vivitrol can cost anywhere from $1,100 to $1,600 dollars per shot. That serves one patient, for one month. However, the trade-off is that there is no need to take a pill every day - which helps addicts who worry about abusing pills.   

 

This is a poster promoting Vivitrol, advertised by the drug's manufacturer, Alkermes. It hangs in Fifth Street Counseling Center's Plantation clinic.
Credit Caitie Switalski / WLRN
/
WLRN
This is a poster promoting Vivitrol, advertised by the drug's manufacturer, Alkermes. It hangs in Fifth Street Counseling Center's Plantation clinic.

There’s a lot of money being spent now on medications to fight addiction: The money for Broward County providers to pay for Vivitrol comes from a pool of $6 million dollars that the state of Florida set aside for the Office of the State Court Administrator to use with the  Florida Alcohol and Drug Abuse Association (FADAA) for medication-assisted treatments.In total, Florida allocated more than  $53 million dollars this year to drug abuse prevention and treatments.Broward County providers share in those funds with the rest of the state. 

Martinez - like many people in Broward using Vivitrol - is able to get the medication for free through  Fifth Street Counseling Center's program. It  is free for anyone as long as they can prove that they aren't able to afford it on their own, or their health insurance won't cover it.

"A generic of oral supplements costs $30 dollars for a month's supply. Let's say and Vivitrol costs $1,100 dollars for a month's supply injection... you have to look at all the factors," Assistant pharmacy professor at Nova Southeastern University, Scott Kjelson, said.  

Kjelson serves on  The United Way of Broward County Commission on Substance Abuse, which is the response team trying to come up with more local solutions to the opioid crisis. While he thinks the medication is one good treatment option for patients, he questions if there aren't smarter ways for Florida to use the funding being allotted for Vivitrol.

There are two other approved drugs used to fight opioid cravings in addicts: Buprenorphine and methadone. But both are forms of opioids that someone will eventually still need to detox off of after using. Vivitrol is not.  

To compare, FADAA estimates the cost of treating someone in Broward with methadone to be anywhere between $390 and $510 per month. The estimated costs of treating someone with buprenorphine can run between $65 and $105 for a one or two week supply. 

Vivitrol is a non-opioid, and non-addictive option for people battling addiction. 

That's part of the reason why the medication is getting more widely used in court systems across the country, including in Broward County. Fifth Street is an approved treatment provider for Broward County's drug court system and also for the state's Department of Children and Families, DCF. 

But the other reason it's becoming more widely used in government systems, including Florida, is its marketing strategy.

Most drug companies market their medications to doctors. However, the company that manufactures Vivitrol - called  Alkermes - uses lobbyists to market its drug directly to judges and policymakers. 

Florida’s latest bill to combat substance abuse funds all three available treatments, but Vivitrol is the only direct brand. It specifically names the "Naltrexone extended-release injectable". There's only one, and it's Vivitrol. 

Read More: Gov. Scott Signs Bill To Combat Opioids Crisis

"We're getting good results, I don't want to diminish the drug, I have a good relationship with them," Dr. Fahie said. "But I'm honest and so...it is not in awe."

Alkermes has a political action committee that has been donating thousands of dollars to Florida politicians for several election cycles now, since before 2016. 

All completely legal. 

Florida Senator Lizbeth Benacquisto received a $1,000 campaign contribution from the company in 2016, as did Representative Jim Boyd in 2015. They sponsored versions of this year's controlled substances bill that provides funding for Vivitrol.

Representative Bryan Avila also worked on the bill and received the same $1,000 campaign contribution from the company.

Benacquisto, Boyd, and Avila did not respond to requests for an interview. 

Kjelson, from NSU, said the political money shouldn't diminish what the drug can do for people, but it can't be ignored either.

"We have to be able to recognize when certain things are being, you know, enticed to use, or subsidized to use - or being paid for," he said.

Read More: Broward, Palm Beach Counties Push Ahead To Sue Big Pharma For Opioid CrisisMartinez says he hasn’t got back to using drugs, but it wasn't only opioids that he was addicted to. He also used meth. But Vivitrol does not block the receptors in your brain that absorb amphetamine drugs. And that has led to an uptick in people turning to meth to get high in some places across the country, like  Vinton County, Ohio

Dr. Fahie said, just in the little over half of a year since incorporating Vivitrol into county treatment plans, he has not seen meth use on the rise in Broward County. Yet, anyway.

He also said, as it is with any addiction treatment program, patients who are the successful ones and can stay sober, are the ones who have a support network from family or friends.

"They have to have psycho-social support, and I can't over-stress that," He said. "It can't just be the shot alone."

Copyright 2020 WLRN 91.3 FM. To see more, visit WLRN 91.3 FM.

Caitie Switalski is a rising senior at the University of Florida. She's worked for WFSU-FM in Tallahassee as an intern and reporter. When she's in Gainesville for school, Caitie is an anchor and producer for local Morning Edition content at WUFT-FM, as well as a digital editor for the station's website. Her favorite stories are politically driven, about how politicians, laws and policies effect local communities. Once she graduates with a dual degree in Journalism and English,Caitiehopes to make a career continuing to report and produce for NPR stations in the sunshine state. When she's not following what's happening with changing laws, you can catchCaitielounging in local coffee shops, at the beach, or watching Love Actually for the hundredth time.