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Old 05-21-2008, 01:02 AM #1
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Default FDA Panel Nixes 'Abuse-Proof' OxyContin

http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/...=25&uac=3807FR

FDA Panel Nixes 'Abuse-Proof' OxyContin
from WebMD — a health information Web site for patients


Todd Zwillich
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May 11, 2008 — A panel of expert advisors to the FDA took a dim view Monday of efforts by OxyContin's manufacturer to market a new form of the prescription painkiller designed to cut down on tampering and abuse.

The deliberations were a setback for the firm, Purdue Pharma. It was stung a year ago when the company and three of its executives pleaded guilty to illegally hiding the addictive potential of the drug, which is a narcotic.

The company now wants to sell a new form of the drug coated in a plastic-like polymer that prevents potential drug abusers from easily grinding tablets into a fine powder. That makes it hard to snort the drug or "cook" it for intravenous injection.

When it is "cooked," it forms a gelatin ball that is difficult to draw into a syringe. But the coating does not affect how the tablets dissolve in the gut, so patients would still be able to use the drug for pain relief, the company said.

Sales and Abuse Up

Sales of oxycodone, including several generic forms as well as Purdue Pharma's brand name OxyContin, have shot up since its extended-release form was approved in 1996. According to the FDA, sales peaked at 42.2 million prescriptions last year, and with them abuse rates have also gone up.

More than 12% of 18- to 25-year-olds reported using the drug for nonmedical reasons in 2006, according to federal figures. Those figures also estimate that 500,000 Americans try oxycodone recreationally for the first time each year.

Purdue Pharma officials tried to show that the polymer cut down on the amount of active drug that an addict could extract from a tablet.

"We can argue that we have met some degree of tamper resistance. But the abuse resistance is yet to be determined," said J. David Haddox, MD, Purdue Pharma's vice president of risk management and health policy.

Data Criticized

But while experts supported the idea of tablets that are hard to misuse while keeping OxyContin available for pain patients, they said the company failed to show that the new form would cut down on abuse in the real world.

The company did not show, for instance, whether motivated addicts with some facility in chemistry would be able to find ways around the polymer coating, experts said.

Panelist Lewis Nelson, MD, said the product could present doctors and regulators with a "false sense of security" that oxycodone is now safe, despite the fact that most overdoses follow the drug being swallowed orally.

"This new product doesn't bring any solution to the vast majority of deaths that occur with this product," said Nelson, director of the medical toxicology program at New York University School of Medicine.

At some points the criticism crossed over into ridicule. Jeffrey R. Kirsch, MD, a member of the panel, said he was "fascinated" with the "poor scientific rigor" or Purdue Pharma's claims that the new OxyContin was truly tamper-resistant.

"Almost to the point of being insulting," added Kirsch, a professor of anesthesiology from Oregon Health and Science University.

"The data presentation I would not allow in an honors undergraduate thesis to go forward," added Ruth S. Day, PhD, a panelist from Duke University.

The panel did not take any formal votes. But it was nearly unanimous that Purdue Pharma should not be allowed to proceed with a plan to sell lower OxyContin doses in the coated form while still selling higher, 60- and 80-milligram doses in the original form.

Doing so would confuse physicians and drive addicts to seek out the old forms of the drug, experts said.

In a statement, the company said it "will continue to work with the FDA on our New Drug Application (NDA) for a new formulation of OxyContin (oxycodone HCl controlled-release) Tablets."

"Untreated and undertreated pain is a serious public health issue in the United States," the statement said.

Three Purdue Pharma executives and the company agreed to pay a combined $634.5 million in fines after pleading guilty to illegally promoting OxyContin to doctors and withholding data on its abuse potential.

SOURCES: National Survey on Drug Use and Health, 2006, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration; J. David Haddox, MD, vice president, risk management and health policy, Purdue Pharma; Lewis Nelson, director, medical toxicology program, New York University School of Medicine; member, FDA panel; Jeffrey R. Kirsch, professor of anesthesiology, Oregon Health and Science University; member, FDA panel; Ruth S. Day, PhD, Duke University; member, FDA panel; Statement, Purdue Pharma.




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Todd Zwillich is a freelance writer for WebMD.


WebMD Health News 2008. © 2008 WebMD Inc.
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Old 05-21-2008, 05:38 AM #2
Marianne Skolek Marianne Skolek is offline
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Default Purdue Pharma and FDA

For the past 5-1/2 years, I have been actively working at exposing Purdue Pharma for their criminally marketing OxyContin. In July 2007, Purdue Pharma, Michael Friedman, Howard Udell and Paul Goldenheim were criminally charged, pled guilty and were sentenced for marketing OxyContin as less likely to be addictive or abused. Their actions have resulted in an epidemic of death and addiction in every state in the country as well as Canada. This criminal activity was conducted under the watch of the FDA. My work now focuses on the FDA's involvement in this criminal behavior and J. David Haddox's part in it all. Marianne Skolek

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Old 05-25-2008, 09:44 PM #3
finz finz is offline
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With respect, Marianne.......

I am glad that the executives who mislead doctors are being held accountable for their crimes. I would have thought they could have made plenty of money just marketing it as more consisent relief for those who require continuos pain medication. That said, I have been surprised to see it prescribed many times for short term or intermittent therapy, which I believe is a misuse of the drug.

However, I am not convinced that they are directly liable for an "epidemic" amount of deaths. How many of the deaths occured because misinformed patients accidentally crushed or chewed the medication ? How many of the deaths were people who criminally obtained the medication and/or deliberately crushed it to get high ?

If I use a gun to deliberately injure myself or someone else, it's not Smith and Wesson's fault.

I have a problem with the way that OxyContin is portrayed in the media...... as "all evil " like heroin. It absolutely has some theraputic uses for many patients. I'm concerned that all of the negative publicity will make it more difficult for many deserving chronic pain patients to find relief, while all of the abusers just move on to another drug
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Old 06-02-2008, 02:10 PM #4
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The bottom line is it's a narcotic. Whether it be extended release or not, just the fact that it is a narcotic means oxy comes with built in, already existing warnings that we all know about narcotics. We already know that all narcotics have abuse and addiction potential. When a company makes a narcotic last 12 hours, I mean, what the hell do you expect????

Like the people that wanna sue McDonalds cause they feel McDonals MADE them fat. They had NO IDEA they would get fat if they ate mostly McDonald's food. I want to include cigarette companies being sued by smokers who say they didn't think they would get lung cancer thru smoking. Can't include cig companies cause in the beginning, they really were just rolling up dried tobacco and very few people did die from smoking.

Then we get "The Insider" movie where the ex-scientist blew the whistle about all the other chemicals tobacco companies put into their cigartettes. The put ammonia into the cigarette to make the nicotine absorb quicker into the body. Then all of the CEO's of the seven tobacco companies SWORE they believed nicotine was NOT addicting.
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