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SMALL BUSINESS
FDA: 'limited' benefit with tamper-proof OxyContin
By MATTHEW PERRONE
, AP
WASHINGTON -Federal health officials say a new version of the painkiller OxyContin that is designed to be harder to abuse offers some improvements over the original pill.
Purdue Pharma LP has touted the new pill's plastic-like coating, which is designed to make the drug harder to crush and snort or inject.
Food and Drug Administration scientists said Tuesday that the drug's resistance to abuse is "limited," but "may provide an advantage over the currently available OxyContin."
A panel of advisers to the FDA said last year that the company needed to do more testing to demonstrate the drug's tamper resistance.
The FDA will ask the same panel Thursday whether the drug should be approved based on new data submitted by Stamford, Conn.-based Purdue Pharma.
OxyContin, the nation's top-selling prescription painkiller last year with sales of more than $2 billion, was hailed as a breakthrough treatment for severe chronic pain when it was introduced in 1996. A time-release version of the narcotic oxycodone, it was designed for use over 12 hours to keep a steady state of the painkiller in the bodies of seriously ill patients.
However, Oxycontin and similar drugs were quickly adapted by drug abusers who discovered they could get a heroin-like high by crushing the pills and snorting or injecting the entire dose at once.
A federal survey conducted in 2007 found that 5.2 million people in the U.S. reported using prescription pain drugs inappropriately.
The FDA has made a number of public service advisories on the problem with little success, and more recently started pressuring companies to make pain relievers more difficult to abuse.
In August, drugmaker King Pharmaceutical's Embeda became the first painkiller to win FDA approval as a tamper-proof medication.
When Purdue Pharma came before the FDA's panel last year, the company said it planned to offer tamper-proof versions of lower dose OxyContin, while keeping higher doses in their original form.
The FDA panel said that was a bad idea since doctors and physicians might mistakenly assume that all doses had been reformulated.
The company has now said it will make the changes to all doses of the drug.
In documents posted online, Purdue Pharma acknowledged that no formulation "will prevent all methods of tampering that may lead to abuse." But the company says the new version should significantly discourage abuse by making the pills more difficult and more time-consuming to manipulate.
OxyContin was the top-selling prescription painkiller in the U.S. last year with sales of nearly $2.3 billion, according to medical research firm IMS Health. The drug accounts for more than half the market for codeine-derived drugs, which also includes Vicodin and various generic medications.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
2009-09-22 12:14:59
COMMENTS ( 16 )
jsfoisufyoa8
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jsfoisufyoa8
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FinnishCandles
9:26AM Sep 23 2009
I agree with the nurse about most pain management docs......the injections DO NOT WORK or work for a very few.......its to bilk your insurance company out of the $$$$$. I am a chronic pain patient and have been in chronic pain for more than half my life. I successfully avoided pain management clinics until 4 yrs ago. I have been LUCKY to have found clinics that wont inject me (because I wont let them, been there done that, not doing it again) I'm stable on my meds, don't abuse my meds. My doc knows I am compliant as can be. I absolutely hate the people that abuse these drugs that chronic patients NEED just to have some of their life back. The abusers make us suffer even more because all docs suspect and distrust EVERYONE because you abuse the drugs some people legitimately NEED just to be able to walk, clean house, go to work without the inescapable pain you don't feel. It isn't YOU thats in pain so what do you care? GET HELP because there are people like me that suffer every single day. I need 7 vertebra fused but no surgeon will touch me with a 10ft pole because my pain can be managed with meds. I have a wheelchair and a full torso back brace too.
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CHnz1
8:48AM Sep 23 2009
You are an idiot.
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FFXICosmos
4:39AM Sep 23 2009
I'm a nurse, and let me tell you a little something about pain doctors. They don't make much for prescribing pills. they make a LOT more for injecting people and other kinds of "therapies" that don't work for "you know what" but they don't care..as one pain doc who is now, gratefully, no longer working in my clinic used to say "I don't pay for my vacations prescribing vicodin." He once told someone who had been on long term (5+years) Percocet to just relax and go out and have a few beers, which is a prescription for liver failure by the way because Percocet contains acetominophen which is toxic when combined with alcohol. He also offered to inject this woman where she had no pain because he thought her insurance would pay for that area, but not where she had the most pain, because the MRI wasn't quite as clear there and he wasn't as sure insurance would pick up the bill. He had one concern and one concern only. MONEY. They are the least respected of all specialties 1. because they are most likely (along with anesthesiologists) to abuse drugs themselves and 2. because they are in medicine simply for the money and for the money alone. If I ever find myself in chronic pain I'll find myself a prescribine Nurse Practitioner and a Chiropractor, in that order. RN, BSN
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