The Food and Drug Administration requested Thursday that the drugmaker Endo Pharmaceuticals stop selling Opana ER — its extended-release version of Opana.
The FDA
says
An increasing number of people, the FDA says, are abusing the powerful prescription pills by crushing, dissolving and injecting them. The sharing of needles by these drug users has fueled an outbreak of associated infectious diseases — HIV, hepatitis C and another serious blood disorder.
"We are facing an
opioid epidemic
"We will continue to take regulatory steps when we see situations where an opioid product's risks outweigh its benefits, not only for its intended patient population but also in regard to its potential for misuse and abuse," Gottlieb says.
In a written
statement
"As a pharmaceutical company with a demonstrated commitment to the improvement of pain management, Endo feels a strong sense of responsibility to improve the care of pain for patients, while at the same time taking comprehensive steps to minimize the potential misuse of its products," according to the firm's statement.
The FDA says if the company fails to voluntarily withdraw the drug the agency will force Opana ER's removal from pharmacy shelves by revoking its market approval.
"In the interim, the FDA is making health care professionals and others aware of the particularly serious risks associated with the abuse of this product," the FDA says.
Opana ER was approved by the FDA for pain management in 2006 as an extended-release opioid. Each pill is designed by the manufacturer to be swallowed and to slowly release the medicine into the bloodstream over a number of hours. But if crushed and snorted or injected, the opioid can deliver a potent high in a single wallop.
As public health authorities and the FDA became increasingly concerned about the nation's epidemic of opioid abuse and overdoses, the company reformulated the drug in 2012, by adding a coating that was intended to make it harder to snort or inject the medicine.
But that strategy appears to have backfired, according to the FDA's review of postmarketing data. Injections of the drug by people with an addiction disorder have continued to trigger outbreaks of
HIV
"When we determined that the product had dangerous unintended consequences, we made a decision to request its withdrawal from the market," says
Dr. Janet Woodcock
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