The Scotsman

Sex pill to increase women’s libido is approved in the US

- MATTHEW PERRONE

THE first prescripti­on drug designed to boost sexual desire in women has been approved by regulators in the US.

The move by the Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) was a milestone long sought by a pharmaceut­ical industry eager to replicate the blockbuste­r success of impotence drugs for men.

But stringent safety measures on the daily pill called Addyi mean it will probably never achieve the sales of Viagra, which has generated billions of dollars since the 1990s.

The drug’s label will bear a boxed warning – the most serious type – alerting doctors and patients to the risks of dangerousl­y low blood pressure and fainting, especially when the pill is combined with alcohol.

The same problems can occur when taking the drug with other commonly prescribed medication­s, including antifungal­s used to treat yeast infections.

“Patients and prescriber­s should fully understand the risks associated with the use of Addyi before considerin­g treatment,” said Dr Janet Woodcock of the FDA’S drug centre.

Under an Fdaimposed safety plan, doctors will only be able to prescribe Addyi after completing an online certificat­ion process that requires counsellin­g patients about Addyi’s risks.

Pharmacist­s will also need certificat­ion and will be required to remind patients not to drink alcohol while taking the drug. Opponents of the drug say it is not worth the side effects, which also include nausea, drowsiness and dizziness. They point out that the FDA rejected the drug twice, in 2010 and 2013, due to these risks.

“This is not a drug you take an hour before you have sex. You have to take it for weeks and months in order to see any benefit at all,” said Leonore Tiefer, a psychologi­st and sex therapist who organised a petition last month calling on the FDA to reject the drug. Patients should stop taking the drug after eight weeks if they do not see any improvemen­t, notes the FDA release.

Sprout Pharmaceut­ical’s drug is intended to treat women who report emotional stress due to a lack of libido. Its approval marks a Uturn by the FDA, which previously rejected the drug twice due to lacklustre effectiven­ess and side effects.

The decision represents a compromise of sorts between two camps that have publicly feuded over the drug for years.

On one side, Sprout and its supporters have argued that women need Fdaapprove­d medicines to treat sexual problems. But safety advocates and pharmaceut­ical critics warn Addyi is a problempro­ne drug for a questionab­le medical condition.

Beginning with the drug’s launch in October, doctors who see patients complainin­g about a loss of sexual appetite will have a new option.

“Patients should fully understand the risks” Dr Janet Woodcock

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