News (Media Awareness Project) - US: FDA Strengthens Its OxyContin Warnings |
Title: | US: FDA Strengthens Its OxyContin Warnings |
Published On: | 2001-07-26 |
Source: | Los Angeles Times (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-08-31 23:54:46 |
FDA STRENGTHENS ITS OXYCONTIN WARNINGS
Medicine: Powerful And Potentially Dangerous Narcotic Is Increasingly Being
Used As A Recreational Drug.
WASHINGTON -- Doctors and pharmacists were urged Wednesday to restrict the
prescription painkiller OxyContin to patients with serious pain, as the
government strengthened warnings that improper use of the pills can cause
addiction and kill.
The actions by the Food and Drug Administration and OxyContin maker Purdue
Pharma of Stamford, Conn., are an attempt to stem illegal use of the
painkiller, which has been cited in increasing reports of addiction,
emergency room visits and overdose deaths.
OxyContin is a long-lasting version of oxycodone, a narcotic considered
important therapy for many patients suffering long-term and moderate to
severe pain from cancer or other illnesses, the FDA stressed. When
swallowed whole, the tablet provides 12 hours of pain relief. But if
chewed, snorted or injected, OxyContin produces a quick, and potentially
lethal, high. It has been linked to more than 100 deaths since 1998.
Drug abusers don't read warning labels. But the hope is that if doctors
give OxyContin just to patients with serious, chronic pain, it will become
harder for abusers to get leftover tablets.
"We're hoping . . . people will consider this a serious drug for serious
pain," said Dr. Cynthia McCormick, the FDA's chief of addictive products.
OxyContin will bear the FDA's strongest type of warning--a black box
calling OxyContin as potentially addictive as morphine and explaining that
chewing, snorting or injecting it can kill, she said.
It is not for mild pain or for temporary pain, such as after dental or
surgical procedures.
Purdue wrote 800,000 doctors about the warnings. Also, the FDA posted a
patient information Web site,
http://http://www.fda.gov/cder/drug/infopage/oxycontin, urging that
OxyContin be kept in a secure location and that unneeded tablets be flushed
down the toilet.
OxyContin is intended to be swallowed whole. If crushed, injected or
inhaled through the nose, the controlled-release mechanism does not work
and a potentially lethal dose is administered, the FDA said.
In May, Purdue Pharma suspended shipment of 160-milligram tablets, the
strongest dose, saying it was "concerned about the possibility of illicit
use of tablets of such high strength."
Reports of misuse have led to legal action in Virginia, West Virginia and
Kentucky.
In June, the drug's makers and promotion partner Abbott Laboratories were
named in a $5.2-billion lawsuit that claims they failed to warn patients
the drug might be dangerously addictive.
Medicine: Powerful And Potentially Dangerous Narcotic Is Increasingly Being
Used As A Recreational Drug.
WASHINGTON -- Doctors and pharmacists were urged Wednesday to restrict the
prescription painkiller OxyContin to patients with serious pain, as the
government strengthened warnings that improper use of the pills can cause
addiction and kill.
The actions by the Food and Drug Administration and OxyContin maker Purdue
Pharma of Stamford, Conn., are an attempt to stem illegal use of the
painkiller, which has been cited in increasing reports of addiction,
emergency room visits and overdose deaths.
OxyContin is a long-lasting version of oxycodone, a narcotic considered
important therapy for many patients suffering long-term and moderate to
severe pain from cancer or other illnesses, the FDA stressed. When
swallowed whole, the tablet provides 12 hours of pain relief. But if
chewed, snorted or injected, OxyContin produces a quick, and potentially
lethal, high. It has been linked to more than 100 deaths since 1998.
Drug abusers don't read warning labels. But the hope is that if doctors
give OxyContin just to patients with serious, chronic pain, it will become
harder for abusers to get leftover tablets.
"We're hoping . . . people will consider this a serious drug for serious
pain," said Dr. Cynthia McCormick, the FDA's chief of addictive products.
OxyContin will bear the FDA's strongest type of warning--a black box
calling OxyContin as potentially addictive as morphine and explaining that
chewing, snorting or injecting it can kill, she said.
It is not for mild pain or for temporary pain, such as after dental or
surgical procedures.
Purdue wrote 800,000 doctors about the warnings. Also, the FDA posted a
patient information Web site,
http://http://www.fda.gov/cder/drug/infopage/oxycontin, urging that
OxyContin be kept in a secure location and that unneeded tablets be flushed
down the toilet.
OxyContin is intended to be swallowed whole. If crushed, injected or
inhaled through the nose, the controlled-release mechanism does not work
and a potentially lethal dose is administered, the FDA said.
In May, Purdue Pharma suspended shipment of 160-milligram tablets, the
strongest dose, saying it was "concerned about the possibility of illicit
use of tablets of such high strength."
Reports of misuse have led to legal action in Virginia, West Virginia and
Kentucky.
In June, the drug's makers and promotion partner Abbott Laboratories were
named in a $5.2-billion lawsuit that claims they failed to warn patients
the drug might be dangerously addictive.
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