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Family pay tribute to 'caring' A-level student, 16, found dead in bedroom after heroin substitute overdose - amid mystery over how he obtained drug
Family pay tribute to 'caring' A-level student, 16, found dead in bedroom after heroin substitute overdose - amid mystery over how he obtained drug

Daily Mail​

time29-05-2025

  • General
  • Daily Mail​

Family pay tribute to 'caring' A-level student, 16, found dead in bedroom after heroin substitute overdose - amid mystery over how he obtained drug

A 'studious' schoolboy was found dead in his bedroom after experimenting with methadone, an inquest heard. Sunny Abreu, 16, was discovered to be unresponsive at his home and paramedics raced there to help but were unable to revive him. A post-mortem examination revealed the teenager had used methadone, a synthetic opioid used to treat heroin dependence or to provide pain relief, although it remains unclear how he obtained it. Norfolk Coroner's Court heard Sunny had taken an amount that would be considered fatal for a 'non-tolerant individual', indicating he was not a regular user. In a heart-wrenching statement at the inquest yesterday, his parents Mario and Sarah Abreu described how they were still struggling to accept the loss more than a year on. 'This still seems so unreal as in [our minds] Sunny is still with us and he has just gone away travelling,' they said. They added: 'Sunny was a kind, caring, funny and generous character who brought bundles of pure fun, joy and energy to every situation. 'He was a free spirit, fearless and adventurous. He was minimalistic, he never wanted for much and showed gratitude for what he had. 'Sunny had a way of making everyone feel special and loved – he always had a listening ear, a helping hand and a kind word. 'He was a genuine soul who touched the lives of countless people with his kindness and compassion.' The statement continued: 'Sunny was bright and positive about everything and we loved Sunny with all our being. 'Part of us has died with Sunny. Life will never be the same. Sunny was the heart of our family, our ray of sunshine and now we are living with a dark cloud looming over us. 'I hope we can finally lay Sunny at rest and move forward, celebrating and remembering his short but full life and his amazing being. 'We will always carry Sunny in our hearts. He was so loved and brought love and joy to us all.' The hearing, in Norwich, was told that Sunny was found in his room at the family home in King's Lynn on April 3 last year. He was described as a creative and academic pupil at Springwood Sixth Form in the town, where he was taking A-levels and planning to become a physiotherapist, but also enjoyed sports, particularly football. The industrious teenager also had an after-school job at N & N Convenience Store near his home where he would clean and restock shelves. Owner Trupti Patel told the Mail: 'He was such a good lad, a brilliant boy. He did his job 100 per cent and never let us down. 'He was very good with his education and he talked to customers. There were no complaints about him any time. 'The day before he died he came in to buy something and I asked him if he wanted to do any extra work. 'I'm so sad about what happened. I never thought about it [taking drugs] – he never smelled of anything. [When he died] I thought it would be a heart attack.' Area coroner Yvonne Blake concluded Sunny was the victim of a drug-related death. The formal cause of death was given as bronchopneumonia and respiratory depression due to methadone toxicity. Dozens of people paid tribute on an online memorial website last year after Sunny died. Tatum Rayner wrote 'I'll miss you and love you forever', while Joseph Hipkin said 'Miss you bud. The physics lessons and random adventures aren't the same without you'. Daisy Jeffries added 'I miss you, Sunny. Next party up there, make sure you bring the right poles for the tent aha', while Jake Bridges commented 'Sunny - miss your smile and you'. A packed funeral service took place at St Faith's Church in Gaywood on May 10 last year, followed by an interment at Gayton Road Cemetery. Data from the UK's National Drug Treatment Monitoring System shows that about 70 per cent of patients receiving opioid substitution treatment in England are prescribed methadone. The remaining 30 per cent receive buprenorphine, which is preferred when there are concerns about the patient having a low tolerance or if they have other health issues such as cardiac or respiratory disease. In 2023, there were 709 deaths involving methadone – which can be lethal in doses as low as 30mg in non-tolerant individuals - and 46 linked to buprenorphine.

Hidden Methods, High Stakes: Clinicians Push FDA on NarxCare
Hidden Methods, High Stakes: Clinicians Push FDA on NarxCare

Medscape

time22-05-2025

  • Health
  • Medscape

Hidden Methods, High Stakes: Clinicians Push FDA on NarxCare

This article is the second in a series on prescription drug monitoring programs and analysis tools designed to give clinicians a view of how likely their patient is to abuse or overdose on a prescribed controlled substance. The first part examines one such tool, NarxCare scores, and the scientific evidence backing their use. This story focuses on the lack of government oversight of such tools and a recent effort to prompt a regulatory agency to set standards for these products. A group representing clinicians and pain patients is seeking a formal review from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) of a controversial product that uses proprietary algorithms in judging the risk for opioid overdose. Their petition is part of a broader debate on how and if algorithm-based clinical decision support tools should be overseen by regulators, just like medical devices are, in an effort to minimize potential patient harm. The platform, called NarxCare, was developed by Bamboo Health, a Louisville, Kentucky–based behavioral health company that is the nation's largest provider to states of technical services for prescription drug monitoring programs (PDMPs). Half of these states — at least 20 — use the company's NarxCare platform, which contains several scores, including one that indicates the past use of prescribed scheduled drugs. 'Patients are judged by an undisclosed algorithm that can determine whether they receive medical care or not — without any way to see, challenge, or correct errors in their score,' said Beverly C. Schechtman, vice president of The Doctor Patient Forum, a nonprofit focused on patients with pain based in Rhode Island. 'We are calling on the FDA to step in and regulate NarxCare before more people are harmed.' Earlier this spring, the group asked the FDA to conduct a formal review to determine if NarxCare qualifies as a medical device subject to regulation. Their letter asked the agency to create clear guidelines for risk-scoring software used in clinical decision-making and to mandate companies to disclose their algorithms and methodologies for independent review. Critics say Bamboo Health has not published the algorithms that generate the scores nor have the tools been extensively validated. While some clinicians see the NarxCare product as a tool to aid in patient care, many also say health clinicians may not provide appropriate pain treatment because of the scores. 'We'd definitely like to see it regulated because it is so vastly used,' said Kate Nicholson, executive director of the National Pain Advocacy Center, which represents researchers and patients. She cited concerns that patients with higher NarxCare scores might be flagged simply because they are treated in group practices, which can make it appear as though they have multiple prescribers. She also said NarxCare scores put people who see several specialists for complex chronic conditions at a disadvantage. Bamboo Health declined requests for interviews and referred Medscape Medical News to an outside spokesperson, who said the company 'won't speculate on ongoing legal matters.' On its website, Bamboo Health stated that it makes information about their algorithms available to clients. The company previously told Medscape Medical News that NarxCare 'falls within the exclusion from FDA oversight for non-device medical software established by Congress.' The FDA is currently taking comments in response to the citizen petition, of which more than 1000 have been made. A Gray Area The implementation of PDMPs and risk scores could be considered a success, with queries by clinicians and other authorized users like pharmacists doubling from 61.5 million in 2014 to 1.4 billion in 2023, according to the American Medical Association (AMA). Federal funding for electronic PDMPs ramped up in the early 2000s in response to the opioid epidemic, which began in the previous decade. Overdose deaths, including those from opioids, nearly quadrupled from 8.2 deaths per 100,000 people in 2002 to 32.6 per 100,000 in 2022. But prescriptions for these drugs have dropped by nearly half since 2012, and deaths linked to the substances are declining. A driver of the crisis has been the practice of 'doctor shopping,' whereby patients seek multiple prescriptions for opioids from different clinicians to avoid raising suspicion about their abuse of the drugs. The NarxCare scores were developed in part to help prevent this problem. One of the components of the scores is information on controlled substances prescribed to a patient, including opioids and sedatives. Scores range from 000 to 999. 'Pharmacists and physicians can use the thresholds as calls-to-action to further review details in the patient's prescription history in conjunction with other relevant patient health information as they attend to the patients,' said Rob Cohen, then-president of Appriss Health, which has since been rebranded as Bamboo Health, in a 2021 press release. At least three other companies provide services for PDMPs in the 10 states where Bamboo Health does not have a foothold, including LogiCoy in Illinois; Leap Orbit in Utah, Maryland, and Nebraska; and Tyler Technologies in Wisconsin. Two states, Kentucky and New York, collect their own PDMP data. Of the states that use Bamboo Health to run various parts of their PDMPs, more than 20 states use the NarxCare platform, according to the company. The AMA told Medscape Medical News it has encouraged Bamboo Health to make its algorithms subject to peer review, such as through publication of a paper in a journal. 'There's a lot of people that give it much more emphasis than it should have, which is as one tool, but not something that should define whether somebody is inappropriately getting prescribed something,' said Bobby Mukkamala, the president-elect of the AMA and chair of the group's AMA Substance Use and Pain Care Task Force. Previous Efforts at Regulation The FDA for many years has regulated some software products used in medicine. But agency leaders and lawmakers have wrestled with questions about the FDA's role in overseeing rapid advances in the field of clinician decision support. In 2016, Congress established broad rules about regulation of these tools as part of the 21st Century Cures Act. But the law did not resolve all the questions about which kinds of decision support products the FDA should regulate and which it should leave alone. The FDA itself concedes that the distinction between software products it can and cannot regulate is difficult to understand. 'Because a wide variety of software can be described as 'decision support,' understanding the regulatory requirements that may apply to such software can be challenging,' the agency says on its website. In 2022, the FDA issued a guidance document to help companies understand which clinical decision support products might trigger further scrutiny. This drew criticism from Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-LA), who said the FDA was seeking to expand its authority of the software without identifying safety concerns for justification. The FDA in 2023 declined to act on another citizen petition filed by the nonprofit Center for US Policy, which sought to have the agencyinitiate a recall of the NarxCare platform. The center focuses on removing barriers to the treatment of pain and opioid use disorder. In explaining that denial, the FDA said requests for the agency to initiate enforcement actions and related regulatory activity are beyond the scope of agency responses to citizen petitions. Medscape Medical News reviewed petition decisions by the FDA's Center for Devices and Radiological Health since July 2024 and found most were denied. An Uncertain Future in Artificial Intelligence (AI) Whether the FDA will grant the petition on NarxCare or otherwise seek to expand its current regulation of AI-driven products is unclear. President Donald Trump has signaled a preference for a more open-market for AI-driven products than for increased regulation. His administration in January revoked a 2023 executive order in which President Joe Biden encouraged the development of AI products, while also seeking safeguards against discrimination and bias. Trump's January 2025 executive order on AI directs agencies to seek ways to remove barriers to innovation in the field. FDA Commissioner Marty Makary, MD, MPH, will likely face challenges regarding the agency's stance on clinical decision support products. Makary last year retweeted a JAMA Health Forum article in which former FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb, MD, said companies working on AI tools for clinical care may limit their product capabilities to avoid having their software tools classified as medical devices. Gottlieb argued for Congress to take more steps to create a more modern approach to regulation of AI devices. 'The FDA's traditional regulatory approach, which depends on the agency's capacity to meticulously examine a product's construction, might prove infeasible in this context,' Gottlieb wrote. Makary repeated this line in a retweet of Gottlieb post on the article, which the now FDA commissioner described as a great take on how 'the FDA needs to change' how it evaluates AI.

Sask. RCMP warning public of ‘unknown' opioid found in Swift Current
Sask. RCMP warning public of ‘unknown' opioid found in Swift Current

CTV News

time22-05-2025

  • CTV News

Sask. RCMP warning public of ‘unknown' opioid found in Swift Current

Following an investigation into a suspected overdose death in Swift Current, the RCMP is warning the public of an unknown opioid circulating the area. The province issued an overdose alert on Tuesday after multiple suspected overdoses were reported, including one death, according to a news release from the police service. Through investigation, Swift Current RCMP determined there may be a quantity of a purple substance sold locally as molly (MDMA) potentially laced with an 'unknown opioid.' The Saskatchewan Coroners Service and Swift Current RCMP continue to investigate but say no specific drug composition details are currently known. RCMP advises people to call 911 immediately if they witness a medical emergency. RCMP also advises people to report drug trafficking activity by calling their local RCMP detachment or submit a tip anonymously through Crime Stoppers.

FDA issues urgent warning over supplement linked to sudden deaths after just three uses
FDA issues urgent warning over supplement linked to sudden deaths after just three uses

Daily Mail​

time10-05-2025

  • Health
  • Daily Mail​

FDA issues urgent warning over supplement linked to sudden deaths after just three uses

The FDA issued a warning to the public about a deadly drug masquerading as a harmless supplement. Dr Marty Makary, FDA Commissioner, wrote an open letter to fellow public health officials in which he advised them spread the word about 'gas station heroin' – powder, liquid, and tablet forms of the unapproved drug tianeptine. 'I want the public to be especially aware of this dangerous product and the serious and continuing risk it poses to America's youth,' Dr Makary said. 'While the FDA is closely following the distribution and sale of these products, it is critical that you appreciate the magnitude of the underlying danger of these products, and disseminate information about it.' Tianeptine—an opioid-like drug with a high risk of addiction—is not banned under federal law. Yet deaths have occurred after just a few pills. Despite its risks, it is sold as a 'harmless' dietary supplement in gas stations and online, even though the FDA has repeatedly warned that it doesn't qualify as one. They say it was never legally sold as a supplement before 1994—the key cutoff for approval—making its current sales outright illegal. Still, Dr Makary and the FDA have pledged to crack down on sellers violating the law: 'While the FDA is closely following the distribution and sale of these products, it is critical that you appreciate the magnitude of the underlying danger of these products, and disseminate information about it. 'Let's be proactive in understanding and addressing the use of tianeptine products, which are available even to our nation's youth.' The substance has been on the government's radar for years. New Jersey poison control logs reported by the CDC last year revealed a rise in emergencies linked to the brand Neptune's Fix. Between June–November 2023, 20 emergency calls documented 17 patients (ages 28–69) collapsing in altered mental state's, dangerous high heart rate, seizures, and cardiac arrest. Thirteen victims were admitted to the ICU with seven placed on ventilators—though no deaths were reported. Most had ingested the tianeptine-kavain blend, but 6 mixed it with opioids, benzos, or kratom, amplifying the crisis. Nine were repeat users, indicating high potential for addiction. 'I am very concerned, Makary said. 'I want the public to be especially aware of this dangerous product and the serious and continuing risk it poses to America's youth.' Tianeptine has some devastating side effects. While inducing a state of euphoria, it can bring about seizures, agitation, confusion, sweating, nausea, vomiting, drowsiness, coma, and death. The supplement has been linked to at least four fatal overdoses since first hitting US shelves in the 2010s. Some of the most popular products include Tianaa, Zaza, Neptune's Fix, Pegasus, and TD Red, and can be found in gas stations, vape shops, and online. 'Case reports in the medical literature describe U.S. consumers ingesting daily doses on the order of 1.3 to 250 times (50 mg to 10,000 mg) the daily tianeptine dose typically recommended in labeled foreign drug products,' Dr Makary added. Tianeptine is an approved as an antidepressant in some Latin American, Asian and European countries. The FDA has warned that quitting tianeptine can trigger opioid-like withdrawal symptoms, including crippling cravings, sweating, chills, diarrhea, and agonizing muscle pain.

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