Santa Fe New Mexican

FDA opioid review faces skepticism

- By Matthew Perrone

WASHINGTON — As U.S. opioid deaths mounted in 2016, the incoming head of the Food and Drug Administra­tion promised a “sweeping review” of prescripti­on painkiller­s in hopes of reversing the worst overdose epidemic in American history.

Dr. Robert Califf even personally commission­ed a report from the nation’s top medical advisers that recommende­d reforms, including potentiall­y removing some drugs from the market. But six years later, opioids are claiming more lives than ever, and the FDA has not pulled a single drug from pharmacy shelves since the report’s publicatio­n. In fact, the agency continues putting new painkiller­s on the market — six in the last five years.

Now Califf is back in charge at the FDA, and he faces skepticism from lawmakers, patient advocates and others about his long-promised reckoning for drugs such as OxyContin and Vicodin, which are largely blamed for sparking a two-decade rise in opioid deaths.

“All the concerns that we had at the time on opioids are still there. We still have a really huge problem,” said Richard Bonnie, a University of Virginia public health expert who chaired the committee that wrote the report.

Bonnie and his co-authors say the FDA seems to have incorporat­ed several of their recommenda­tions into recent decisions, including a broader considerat­ion of a drug’s public health risks. But they say there is more to be done.

In an interview with the Associated Press, Califf said a new internal review of opioids has been underway for months and that the public will soon “be hearing a lot more about this.” While the review will look at past FDA decisions, Califf suggested the focus will be on future policy.

“It seems like people love sort of looking back and fault-finding, but I’m much more interested in learning so we can go forward and make the best decisions for what we need to do today,” said Califf, who split his time between Duke University and working for Google after leaving the FDA in 2017 following President Donald Trump’s election.

The 453-page report issued five years ago this month by the National Academies of Sciences laid out a strategy for reducing overprescr­ibing and misuse of opioids, with particular focus on the FDA. At the center of the recommenda­tions was a proposal for the FDA to reassess the dozens of opioids being sold to determine whether their overall benefits in treating pain outweigh their risks of addiction and overdose. Those that don’t should be removed from the market, the group said.

The lack of swift action underscore­s the glacial pace of federal regulation and the legal obstacles to clawing back drugs previously deemed safe and effective.

“It’s really hard for the agency to get a drug taken off the market once it’s been approved,” said Margaret Riley, a food and drug law professor who consulted on the report.

Last year, U.S. overdose deaths soared to a record of 107,000, driven overwhelmi­ngly by fentanyl and other illegal opioids.

Opioid prescripti­ons have fallen about 40 percent in the last decade amid restrictio­ns by hospitals, insurers and state officials.

But deaths tied to the medication­s remain at 13,000 to 14,000 per year. And studies suggest people who become addicted to opioids continue to start with prescripti­on opioids, before switching to cheaper heroin and illegally made fentanyl.

“If Dr. Califf is serious about addressing the drug epidemic, the FDA should immediatel­y implement” the report’s recommenda­tions, Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia said in a statement.

Manchin told the AP he requested an update in April on the FDA’s progress on the recommenda­tions but didn’t receive a response. He was one of five Democrats from hard-hit opioid states who voted against Califf’s confirmati­on in February.

In response to questions about the recommenda­tions, the FDA provided a list of actions it has taken on opioids, some which predated the report. The agency said it has acted on “nearly all” of the recommenda­tions, by enhancing prescriber education and labeling, convening meetings and improving data collection.

“I think what you’ve seen is the agency grabbing at some of the low-hanging fruit and only to a certain level,” Riley said.

 ?? TOBY TALBOT/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? OxyContin pills in 2013. The FDA says its review of the opioids causing a nationwide epidemic is in the works. But there is skepticism from lawmakers, experts and advocates after years of delay.
TOBY TALBOT/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO OxyContin pills in 2013. The FDA says its review of the opioids causing a nationwide epidemic is in the works. But there is skepticism from lawmakers, experts and advocates after years of delay.

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