FDA Acts to Reduce Harm from Opioid Drugs
The White House on Tuesday unveiled a
multi-agency plan aimed at reducing the “epidemic” of prescription drug abuse
in the U.S.—including an FDA-backed education program that zeros-in on reducing
the misuse and misprescribing of opioids.
Gil Kerlikowske, director of the White
House Office of National Drug Control Policy, says the plan—a collaborative
effort involving agencies of the departments of Justice, Health and Human
Services, Veterans Affairs, Defense, and others—provides a national framework
for reducing prescription drug abuse and the diversion of prescription drugs
for recreational use.
“The toll our nation’s prescription drug
abuse epidemic has taken in communities nationwide is devastating,” says
Kerlikowske. “We share a responsibility to protect our communities from the
damage done by prescription drug abuse.”
Key elements of the plan—called Epidemic:
Responding to America’s Prescription Drug Abuse Crisis—include:
·
expansion of
state-based prescription drug monitoring programs
·
recommending
convenient and environmentally responsible ways to remove unused medications
from homes
·
supporting
education for patients and health care providers
·
reducing the
number of “pill mills” and doctor-shopping through law enforcement
FDA Opioid Strategy
In concert with the White House plan, the
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is announcing a new risk reduction
program—called a Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy—for all
extended-release and long-acting opioid medications.
Opioids are synthetic versions of opium
that are used to treat moderate and severe pain.
FDA experts say extended-release and
long-acting opioids—including OxyContin, Avinza, Dolophine, Duragesic, and
eight other brand names—are extensively misprescribed, misused, and abused,
leading to overdoses, addiction, and even deaths across the United States. FDA
says a 2007 survey revealed that more than half of opioid abusers got the drug
from a friend or relative.
Opioids—such as morphine and
oxycodone—are used to treat moderate and severe pain. Over the past few decades,
drug makers have developed extended-release opioid formulas to treat people in
pain over a long period.
The new REMS plan focuses primarily on:
educating doctors about proper pain management, patient selection, and other
requirements and improving patient awareness about how to use these drugs
safely. As part of the plan, FDA wants companies to give patients education
materials, including a medication guide that uses consumer friendly language to
explain safe use and disposal.
FDA wants drug makers to work together to
develop a single system for implementing the REMS strategies. Toward that goal,
FDA is now notifying opioid makers that they must propose a REMS plan within
120 days.
Janet Woodcock, director of FDA’s Center
for Drug Evaluation and Research, says this risk management strategy is
designed to improve pain management, while preserving patient access to these
needed medications.
“This will be an important step toward
addressing what has become a critical public health problem,” she says.
Doctor training, patient counseling, and
other risk reduction measures developed by opioid makers as part of the REMS
are expected to become effective by early 2012. They will be required for
various brand name products known under the generic names:
·
hydromorphone
·
oxycodone
·
morphine
·
oxymorphone
·
methadone
·
transdermal
fentanyl
·
transdermal
buprenorphine
Widespread Problem
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. And in 2006, nearly
50,000 emergency room visits were related to opioids.
"Opioid drugs have benefit when used
properly and are a necessary component of pain management for certain patients,
but we know that they pose serious risks when used improperly—with serious
negative consequences for individuals, families, and communities," says
FDA Commissioner Margaret A. Hamburg, M.D. “The prescriber education component
of this Opioid REMS balances the need for continued access to these medications
with stronger measures to reduce their risks."
Although doctor training is not mandatory
under the REMS plan, other federal agencies are working to get Congress to link
mandatory physician training to the already required Drug Enforcement
Administration registration number that doctors must have to prescribe
controlled substances.
FDA will also require the risk management
plan to include a way to determine if the education programs are helping to
reduce problems associated with long-acting and extended-release opioids, as
well as allowing patients who need opioids to get them.
FDA has had the power to request
companies to develop REMS since 2007. The plans may also include medication
guides and patient package inserts.
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