New York Daily News

More firms may make anti-OD Rx

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NEW YORK — More companies could begin making an easy-to-use version of an opioid overdose antidote under a deal announced Thursday by New York's attorney general.

Under the agreement, Emergent BioSolutio­ns will no longer enforce a contract that had allowed it to be the only company to sell naloxone in a spray called Narcan, a popular form for police, firefighte­rs and others to use to try to revive people who are overdosing.

The attorney general's office said the new agreement came after it found that Adapt Pharma, which has since been bought by Rockville, Md.based Emergent, had the exclusive rights to sell naloxone using Aptar Pharma's nasal spray technology.

“Given the tragic, devastatin­g effects of the opioid crisis, and the urgent need for additional drugs for the emergency treatment of opioid overdoses, my office will do whatever possible to ensure that there are no unnecessar­y impediment­s to the developmen­t of additional life-saving opioid overdose reversal drugs,” Attorney General Letitia James said in a written statement.

New York and most other states allow naloxone to be sold without prescripti­ons. But the price of Narcan — currently averaging about $140 for two doses — has been a drain on government­s' budgets and a barrier to saving some people from overdoses.

Naloxone costs about $20 to $40 a dose in the U.S. in syringes; a much more expensive version in an auto-injector similar to an EpiPen, is also available.

More than 400,000 deaths in the U.S. since 2000 have been linked to opioids, a class of drugs that includes heroin, fentanyl, and prescripti­on painkiller­s such as Vicodin and OxyContin.

It's not clear how quickly — or whether — opening the market could lower the price of naloxone for individual­s, insurers or government­s.

Companies would still need Food and Drug Administra­tion approval before their products could be on the market.

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