The Palm Beach Post

FDA OKs pill to help reduce pain caused by endometrio­sis

- By Linda A. Johnson

TRENTON, N. J.—A new treatment for pain caused by endometrio­sis was approved Tuesday by U.S. regulators.

The common condition involves abnormal tissue growth from the uterus that can cause severe pain and infertilit­y.

Drugmaker Abbvie said the Food and Drug Administra­tion approved the drug, Orilissa, for pain during menstruati­on and intercours­e and at other times. Abbvie says it’s the first new pill for endometrio­sis in a decade.

In testing, it significan­tly reduced menstrual pain in about 45 percent of women given a low dose and 75 percent given a high dose, compared to about 20 percent of women given dummy pills. Reduction of pain outside menstruati­on was slightly lower.

The drug works by reducing production of the hormone estrogen. That caused side effects in some participan­ts, including hot flashes, headaches and bone thinning.

Ori lissa will cost $845 every four weeks, without insurance.

An estimated 1 in 10 women of reproducti­ve age has endometrio­sis. Treatment usually begins with over-the-counter pain relievers, opioid painkiller­s and birth control pills. Other options include injections of hormone-suppressin­g drugs, which have significan­t side effects, and surgery.

The new pill provides more flexible dosing in lowering estrogen levels, according to Dr. Hugh Taylor of Yale-New Haven Hospital. A consultant to AbbVie, he helped lead key studies of Orilissa.

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