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 FDA Weighs Options To Reduce Painkiller Overdoses

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MessageSujet: FDA Weighs Options To Reduce Painkiller Overdoses   FDA Weighs Options To Reduce Painkiller Overdoses Icon_minitimeLun 29 Juin - 16:51

FDA Weighs Options To Reduce Painkiller Overdoses
TOPICS:Regulations | FDA | Pharmaceuticals
SECTORS:Personal and Household Goods | Pharmaceuticals | Pharmaceuticals and Biotechnology
COMPANIES:Procter & Gamble Co | Bayer AG | Novartis AG | Johnson and Johnson | Wyeth
By: AP | 29 Jun 2009 | 08:49 AM ET Text Size
Tylenol, Excedrin, NyQuil. These household brands and others have come to symbolize safe, convenient relief from the aches and pains of everyday life.


Pills

But this week the Food and Drug Administration is focusing on a seldom-discussed side effect of the medications: severe liver damage. Since the drugs first became widely available in the 1950s, the FDA has tried to minimize the risks of acetaminophen — the pain-relieving, fever-reducing ingredient in Tylenol and dozens of other prescription and over-the-counter medications.

Acetaminophen overdoses send an estimated 56,000 people to the emergency room each year, according to the FDA.

Despite decades of educational campaigns, bolstered warnings and other federal actions, acetaminophen continues to be the leading cause of liver failure in the U.S.

In documents posted online, the FDA said marketing of Tylenol and other medications emphasizes their safety, leading many consumers to assume they are "extremely safe and not likely to lead to serious injury."

But the 4 gram-per-day maximum dose listed on many medications is just below levels that can cause potentially fatal liver injury.

During a two-day meeting that started Monday morning, the FDA is asking more than 35 experts what additional steps can be taken to reduce accidental overdose with the over-the-counter and prescription pain relievers.

The FDA does not have to follow the group's advice, though it usually does. Individual companies already are sparring in an effort to influence the FDA's decision.



Panelists will be asked to vote on a range of options: adding a "black box" warning label to the products, lowering the drug dosage in some products, or pulling certain types of medications off the market — which could cost manufacturers millions in sales.

The drugs that could be pulled off store shelves are combination medications, such as Procter & Gamble's [PG 51.71 -0.04 (-0.08%) ] NyQuil or Novartis' [NVS 40.69 -0.65 (-1.57%) ] Theraflu, which combine acetaminophen with other ingredients that treat cough and runny nose.

The FDA has focused on both prescription and nonprescription combination drugs because patients often pair them with a pure acetaminophen medication, like Tylenol, exposing themselves to unsafe levels of the drug.

Still, the agency acknowledges that such overdoses only account for a small number of deaths. According to FDA documents, only five of the 72 deaths reported with acetaminophen in 2005 involved combination drugs. Twenty-seven of the deaths involved single-ingredient over-the-counter acetaminophen products. The remaining 40 deaths were connected with prescription acetaminophen drugs.

Though pulling popular brand-name drugs off the market would be an unusually aggressive step by the government, the industry's trade group already is making a strong case for the products.

"These products provide consumers with effective pain relief and are safe and effective when used according to labeled direction," the Consumer Healthcare Products Association said in briefing documents posted online.

Acetaminophen is one of the most widely used drugs in the U.S., with more than 28 billion doses sold in 2005, according to the FDA.


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Industry leaders have launched campaigns to try and sway the FDA's decision.

Tylenol-maker Johnson & Johnson [JNJ 56.13 -0.47 (-0.83%) ] warned panelists that any new restrictions on acetaminophen would force patients to switch to nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, which carry risks of gastrointestinal bleeding and kidney injury. Top-sellers in that market include Bayer's aspirin and Wyeth's [WYE 44.95 -0.08 (-0.18%) ] Advil.

In response, executives from Wyeth scheduled a series of media briefings last week, arguing that there is no evidence that reduced use of acetaminophen would cause more negative side effects with their drug.

"There are major flaws in their arguments that are not born out in real world experience," said Dr. Paul Desjardins, a vice president with Wyeth.

Desjardins pointed out that the U.K. has put tighter safety measures in place for acetaminophen without causing increased problems with Advil and other nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs.

For its part, the FDA has made clear it will not play king-maker in the market for over-the-counter medications. The agency says its only goal is to reduce liver injury, "not to decrease appropriate acetaminophen use or to drive people to use NSAIDS instead."
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Nombre de messages : 36
Date d'inscription : 09/06/2009

FDA Weighs Options To Reduce Painkiller Overdoses Empty
MessageSujet: Re: FDA Weighs Options To Reduce Painkiller Overdoses   FDA Weighs Options To Reduce Painkiller Overdoses Icon_minitimeMar 30 Juin - 19:37

source : The Washington Post


FDA panel recommends smaller doses of painkillers


The Associated Press
Tuesday, June 30, 2009; 12:05 PM

ADELPHI, Md. -- Government experts say the maximum daily dose listed on Tylenol and dozens of other painkillers should be reduced to help curb deadly overdoses.

The Food and Drug Administration's panel voted 21-16 to lower the current maximum dose of nonprescription acetaminophen, which is 4 grams, or eight pills per day. Taking more than that can cause potentially fatal liver damage.

Federal regulators are asking experts to vote on ways to prevent overdose with acetaminophen - the key ingredient in Tylenol, Excedrin and other medications.

Despite years of educational campaigns and other actions, the FDA says acetaminophen remains the leading cause of liver failure in the U.S.

The panel also is scheduled to vote on other proposals to reduce overdose with the drugs.


------------------------------
traduction rapide :
------------------------------

FDA panel recommande des doses plus faibles d'analgésiques


The Associated Press
Mardi, 30 Juin 2009, 12:05 PM

ADELPHI, Md. - Gouvernement des experts de la dose quotidienne maximale
figurant sur les Tylenol et des dizaines d'autres analgésiques
devraient être réduites à contribuer à réduire les surdoses mortelles.

La Food and Drug Administration du groupe a voté 21-16 à la baisse la
dose maximale d'acétaminophène sans ordonnance, ce qui est de 4
grammes, ou huit pilules par jour. Prenant plus que cela peut causer
des dommages au foie potentiellement mortelle.

Fédéral de
réglementation se posent les experts à se prononcer sur les moyens de
prévenir un surdosage avec l'acétaminophène - l'ingrédient clé dans
Tylenol, Excedrin et d'autres médicaments.

Malgré des années
de campagnes d'éducation et d'autres actions, la FDA a dit
acétaminophène demeure la principale cause d'insuffisance hépatique aux
États-Unis


Le groupe a également prévu de vote sur d'autres propositions visant à réduire les surdoses de drogues.
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