New York Daily News

Feds hardly try to rein in opioid plugs

- BY REUVEN BLAU

IN THE MIDST of a national opioid crisis, the federal agency that monitors drug ads has issued a record low number of warning letters to pharmaceut­ical companies caught lying about their products.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion has sent a mere three letters to drugmakers busted for overhyping their medication­s to unknowing consumers, the lowest ever since the agency’s historic decision to ease strict rules for ads in 1997.

“It certainly raises questions,” said Dr. David Kessler, who helmed the FDA from late 1990 through 1996.

The FDA’s Office of Prescripti­on Drug Promotion monitors all ads drug companies issue to make sure patients aren’t being scammed by false assertions.

The pharmaceut­ical industry spent $6.4 billion in “direct-to-consumer” advertisem­ents to hype new drugs in 2016, according to tracking firm Kantar Media. That figure has gone up by 62% since 2012, Kantar Media says.

But the agency has long struggled to keep track of the thousands of ads published each year, largely due to lack of staff.

There are approximat­ely 60 FDA staffers responsibl­e for keeping track of at least 75,000 ads and other promotiona­l material published each year.

“It’s a very, very small unit,” a former high-ranking FDA official said. “It’s historical­ly been underfunde­d.”

Additional­ly, many of the ads are submitted to the FDA for review at the same time they begin to run. So by the time the assessment is complete, the ad has “already had a significan­t impact,” the FDA insider said.

Critics say the FDA needs to do more to stay on top of an industry with a history of trying to maximize profits by at times misleading consumers.

The number of public admonishme­nt letters has been at or close to single digits from 2014 until 2016 during the Obama administra­tion, records show.

The FDA sent out 11 of those caution missives in 2016, nine in 2015 and 2014, and 24 in 2013.

This year, one of the warning letters was sent to Canadian drugmaker Cipher Pharmaceut­icals, ordering it stop using deceptive promotiona­l material to hawk its extendedre­lease opioid ConZip.

The agency demanded that Cipher “immediatel­y cease misbrandin­g” the medication. The drug company responded by yanking the promotiona­l material, the firm’s execs said in a statement issued after the warning letter was made public.

But that was the single caution letter issued to an overhyped painkiller by the FDA this year so far, records show.

The other caution letters were sent to Amherst Pharmaceut­icals for the insomnia drug Zolpimist, and to Orexigen Therapeuti­cs Inc. for its weight-loss drug Contrave.

The FDA maintains that letters to drug companies are merely one tool the agency uses to keep the pharmaceut­ical industry in line.

“We have many efforts to encourage compliance by industry, including our work on guidances, providing advice to companies on draft promotiona­l materials, and outreach to our stakeholde­rs,” FDA spokeswoma­n Stephanie Caccomo said.

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