|
FDA Experts Urge Ban on Cold
Medicines for Young Children
New York -
U.S. health experts on Friday urged the federal Food and Drug
Administration to consider banning the sale of over-the-counter
cough and cold medicines for young children.
The recommendation, from FDA safety
officials, would apply to decongestant use in children under 2, and
antihistamines in those younger than 6, according to agency
documents released Friday, the Associated Press reported.
The products include approximately
800 popular medicines that are sold in the United States under names
like Toddler's Dimetapp, Triaminic Infant and Little Colds, The New
York Times reported.
A group of outside experts advising
the FDA will consider the recommendation during a meeting on Oct. 18
and 19, and will then offer an opinion to the full agency.
In the safety review released
Friday, the FDA experts recommended that all infant cough and cold
products be removed from the market. They also recommended that the
sizes of the droppers, cups and syringes packaged with products be
standardized to reduce the possibility of confusion and overdose,
the Times said.
An FDA review of records filed with
the agency between 1969 and September 2006 found 54 reports of
deaths in children associated with decongestant medicines made with
pseudoephedrine, phenylephrine or ephedrine. It also found 69
reports of deaths associated with antihistamine medicines containing
diphenhydramine, brompheniramine or chlorpheniramine, the AP said.
Most of the deaths were children
younger than 2.
The Consumer Healthcare Products
Association, which represents makers of over-the-counter medicines,
backs the recommendation that the cold and cough treatments not be
used in children younger than 2. As for antihistamines, the group
recommends adding a warning that the drugs not be used to sedate
young children, the AP said.
Also Friday, FDA officials
announced a crackdown on drug companies that make unapproved
prescription drugs containing the narcotic hydrocodone, which is
used as a cough suppressant and pain killer.
Hydrocodone
is one of the strongest drugs used to treat pain or to suppress
cough. It's also widely abused and, if improperly used, can lead to
illness and death. Overdoses of hydrocodone can cause breathing
problems or cardiac arrest and can impair motor skills and judgment,
U.S. Food and Drug Administration officials said.
"The FDA is announcing an action to
stop the illegal marketing of any unapproved drug product containing
hydrocodone," Deborah M. Autor, director of the agency's Office of
Compliance, Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, said during a
Friday teleconference.
Some pain-relief products
containing hydrocodone, such as Vicodin, are FDA-approved. But most
of the drugs with hydrocodone now marketed to suppress coughs have
not been approved, officials said.
Autor said the unapproved products
are made by some 100 manufacturers.
The FDA said it was particularly
concerned about improper pediatric labeling of unapproved
hydrocodone cough suppressants -- also known as antitussives. None
of the drugs that contain hydrocodone has been approved for children
younger than 2 years old.
"There are hydrocodone-containing
products on the market that claim they are suitable for children as
young as 2," Autor said.
Also, many of the products don't
carry the proper warning label and often have similar names to other
medications, creating a high risk of medication error, Autor added.
"Product names are so similar that
the wrong doses or wrong medication may be dispensed," she said.
Hydrocodone is a narcotic regulated
by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, Autor said.
Friday's announcement came one day
after President George W. Bush signed a five-year renewal of a law
that helps fund the FDA's ability to oversee prescription drug
safety.
The new law allows the FDA to
collect higher fees from drug and medical device makers, which helps
defray the agency's costs of reviewing products submitted for
approval. The law also gives the agency more powers to take action
when there are problems with drugs already on the market. For
example, the FDA can order drug companies to do further studies on
the safety of medicine and to put new label warnings on products.
The agency now has the authority to fine companies that fail to
comply with such orders.
Under the new law, the Food and
Drug Administration Amendments Act of 2007, drug and medical device
companies must also publicly release results of all clinical trials
that show how well approved drugs performed, according to published
reports.
But the FDA's ability to oversee
clinical trials was called into question Friday with the release of
a highly critical report by the inspector general of the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services.
In the report, Daniel R. Levinson
said he found that FDA officials didn't know how many clinical
trials were being conducted and audited fewer than 1 percent of
clinical testing sites. In the few instances where FDA inspectors
did check a site, they generally showed up long after the tests had
been completed, Levinson noted, the Times reported.
The FDA has 200 inspectors to
monitor about 350,000 testing sites. Even when inspectors identified
serious problems in human clinical trials, top FDA officials
downgraded the inspectors' findings 68 percent of the time, Levinson
found. In the rest of the cases, it was rare for the FDA to follow
up with inspections to assess whether corrective actions ordered by
the agency had been done, the Times reported.
The Levinson report echoes other
recent criticisms of the FDA's oversight of imported food, foreign
drug manufacturers, animal food and medication safety.
In announcing Friday's decision on
hydrocodone, the FDA said it was prompted to take the action because
it had received reports of "medication errors associated with
unapproved hydrocodone products and reports of confusion over the
similarity of the names of unapproved products to approved drug
products."
Autor
said that about 2 percent of all prescriptions written in the United
States are for unapproved drugs. With some 200 unapproved drugs
containing hydrocodone on the market, it's highly likely that most
of the prescriptions for cough medicines that contain hydrocodone
are for unapproved brands, she said.
Currently, she added, the approved
cough medications containing hydrocodone are: TussiCaps, Tussionex
Pennkinetic, Hydrocodone Compound, Mycodone Homatropine
Methylbromide, Hycodan, Tussigon, and Vicodin.
According to the FDA, companies
marketing unapproved hydrocodone products that are labeled for use
in children younger than 6 years of age must stop manufacturing and
distributing the products by Oct. 31.
Companies making other unapproved
hydrocodone drug products must stop manufacturing such products on
or before Dec. 31, 2007, and must "cease further shipment in
interstate commerce on or before March 31, 2008."
The FDA said there are alternatives
to unapproved hydrocodone-containing products. These include one of
the seven approved cough medicines that contain hydrocodone as well
as other cough suppressants that don't use hydrocodone.--
HealthDay
Click
Here To Have Your Say On This Story
Brudirect.com News
|