jueves, 11 de agosto de 2016

FDA Supports Greater Access to Naloxone to Help Reduce Opioid Overdose Deaths | FDA Voice

FDA Supports Greater Access to Naloxone to Help Reduce Opioid Overdose Deaths | FDA Voice

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FDA Supports Greater Access to Naloxone to Help Reduce Opioid Overdose Deaths

By: Karen Mahoney, M.D.
Overdose deaths involving prescription opioids such as oxycodone, hydrocodone and morphine and illicit opioids such as heroin and illegally produced fentanyl have more than tripled since 1999 – with about 28,000 people dying in 2014 alone.
Many of these tragedies could have been avoided if the people experiencing the overdose had immediately received the prescription drug naloxone, a life-saving medication that can stop or reverse the effects of an opioid overdose.
Naloxone is still a prescription in all 50 states and the District of Columbia, though many have or are taking steps to make naloxone more accessible. Consistent with our opioid action plan announced earlier this year, the FDA is exploring options to make naloxone more available to treat opioid overdose. One option to do this is identifying ways to assist manufacturers in submitting an application to the FDA for an over-the-counter (OTC) version of a naloxone product.
That’s why the FDA is working on innovative ways to help facilitate the process of helping manufacturers pursue approval of an OTC naloxone product, including helping to develop the package label that would be required for such a product. This is an important step to help increase access to and the use of this life-saving drug.
Although the two currently available prescription naloxone products intended for use in the community — an auto-injector product for self-injection, and a nasal spray formulation – have instructions for use, they do not have the consumer-friendly Drug Facts Label (DFL), which is required for OTC drug products. Before submitting a new drug application or supplement for an OTC drug product, companies develop this DFL and conduct the required studies to show that consumers can follow the DFL to understand how to use the product without the help of a healthcare professional.
To help facilitate the development of OTC naloxone, the FDA has created a model DFL and an accompanying simple pictogram that could be placed next to the DFL to visually correspond to the label directions. This model DFL and pictogram are intended to provide consumers with the information they would need to understand how to safely use naloxone, including when it is appropriate to purchase naloxone and how to use it in an emergency opioid overdose situation. Since it is a model label, information that is highly specific to a particular product would not be included.
The FDA has also arranged for label comprehension testing of the model DFL. This testing is now being conducted and we expect that the results will yield important information about consumer understanding of the model naloxone DFL. Using this information, naloxone manufacturers may then be able to focus their final label comprehension testing on how well consumers understand product-specific information, such as instructions for the device that delivers naloxone that has not been already tested on the model DFL.
Creating a model DFL and arranging for label comprehension testing are among the ways that the FDA is working to fulfill our commitment to enhanced naloxone access, where possible, in our opioids action plan. We will continue to work with interested manufacturers and developers to further explore the best uses of naloxone for the emergency treatment of known or suspected opioid overdoses until emergency medical help arrives.
FDA’s opioid action plan is part of the comprehensive Opioid Initiative launched by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) in March 2015. The Initiative focuses on high-impact strategies to 1) improve opioid prescribing, 2) expand access to medication-assisted treatment for opioid use disorders, and 3) increase the use of naloxone to reverse opioid overdoses.
Karen Mahoney, M.D., is FDA’s Deputy Director, Division of Nonprescription Drug Products, at the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research

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