FDA unveils new action on prescription drug abuse

Related Topics

WASHINGTON | Tue Apr 19, 2011 2:35pm EDT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. health regulator ordered painkiller makers to provide educational materials to help train physicians about the correct use of the drugs, as part of the Obama administration's plan to tackle prescription drug abuse.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has sent letters to drugmakers manufacturing opioids asking them to prepare materials that physicians or prescribers can use while counseling patients about the risks and benefits of opioid use.

While the documents will be prepared by the drugmakers, the FDA will approve them before they are implemented, FDA commissioner Margaret Hamburg said at a news conference on Tuesday.

Drugs that require the new educational guidelines include Johnson & Johnson's Duragesic, Pfizer Inc unit King Pharma's Avinza and Embeda, Actavis' Kadian and Endo Pharmaceuticals' Opana ER.

The list also includes some generic opioid drugs made by Mylan, Teva Pharmaceutical Industries, Watson Pharmaceuticals, Novartis unit Sandoz, KV Pharmaceuticals and Impax Laboratories.

Opioids are synthetic versions of opium that are used to treat moderate and severe pain.

Prescription drug abuse has become a serious concern in recent years and was the second-biggest reason behind accidental deaths in 2007.

The drugmakers have 120 days to propose a plan for their drugs. FDA will be getting back to drugmakers within 120 days of the plan submission.

Doctor training, patient counseling, and other risk reduction measures developed by opioid makers as part of the plans, known as risk evaluation and mitigation strategies or REMS, are expected to become effective by early 2012.

"The prescriber education component of the opioid REMS balances the need for continued access to these medications with stronger measures to reduce their risks," Hamburg said.

The plans aim to make sure specific drugs are used only for the purposes they were approved for and not anything else, thus cutting down misuse without restricting access.

FDA estimates that more than 33 million Americans age 12 and older misused extended-release and long-acting opioids during 2007, up from 29 million just five years earlier.

"This is a problem that touches all of us," FDA commissioner Hamburg said.

According to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data, opioid overdose killed far more people than overdose of street drugs like cocaine and heroin.

However, the new actions are not expected to put a new burden on the already-expensive healthcare system, Gil Kerlikowske, director of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, told reporters.

"There is very little money involvement," Kerlikowske said.

We welcome comments that advance the story through relevant opinion, anecdotes, links and data. If you see a comment that you believe is irrelevant or inappropriate, you can flag it to our editors by using the report abuse links. Views expressed in the comments do not represent those of Reuters. For more information on our comment policy, see http://blogs.reuters.com/fulldisclosure/2010/09/27/toward-a-more-thoughtful-conversation-on-stories/
Comments (4)
Pixelman wrote:
Interesting. I had a femoral osteotomy last September (leg shortening). I had about an inch taken out of my femur and a titanium rod pounded inside of my femur with two screws holding it in place. One screw above my knee and one in my hip. I had 36 staples along my whole leg. I had an epidural for 3 days after my surgery. After it was removed I was in the worst pain I’ve ever experienced. I was in tears it was so painful. The Hydrocodone did NOTHING at that point so the nurse gave me one small dose of Oxycodone just so that I could sleep. Then when that didn’t work, a few hours later I had to beg for her to do SOMETHING so she gave me a shot of morphine just so I could cope at 2am. When I was sent home, my surgeon prescribed me 7.5 mg Hydrocodone with 500mg of acetaminophen. The first week I was in horrific pain and kept my dad awake all night with the constant pain I was in. If I get the rod removed, which is an option, things WILL be different. There is absolutely no reason to suffer like that. And yes, I was aware the recovery was going to be very painful. There is a difference between exercising caution with patients pain medication and it another issue altogether of prescribing the appropriate dose of NEEDED pain medication, post operatively. This requires good communication between the doctor, nurses, anesthesiologist and patient!

Apr 20, 2011 1:29am EDT  --  Report as abuse
vtyankee14 wrote:
As a user of many prescription drugs to help my condition of schizophrenia I can with authority say that the means and methods while painful have to be done as the exuberance of youth is not to be allowed when the matter of dangerous drugs comes into play! I stopped taking the psychotropic drugs cause they did not work and the side effects were horrendous! I instead chose to go the route of HYPNOTIC SEDATION which has been proven effective in a percentage of paranoid schizophrenics! The first time I had to suffer due to the illicit use of drugs was when Ronald Reagan made Qualludes illegal and therefore forced me to revert to using BARBITUATES as a means of sedation! So even though I do not suffer from chronic pain I too have had to suffer because of illegal drug users who were getting too much of a good thing! It can cause one to get angry at the dunderheads who make it bad for the rest of us who need certain medications which just so happen to be the drug of choice among many underground drug users! Have a good day.

Apr 20, 2011 10:36am EDT  --  Report as abuse
ECKJR wrote:
I agree with Pixelman: too many doctors are too cautious in prescribing pain medication when people are in real pain. It’s been proven that there is little or no probability of addiction when the pain killers are needed to preclude the suffering caused by real pain. If a few doctors were sued for malpractice due to causing pain and suffering, maybe they wouldn’t be so reluctant to prescribe them when really needed.

Apr 20, 2011 1:00pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
This discussion is now closed. We welcome comments on our articles for a limited period after their publication.