The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

FDA tells Endo to stop selling opioids

Regulators say company’s reformulat­ed Opana ER drug is being abused by people who are injecting it

- By Linda A. Johnson AP Medical Writer

TRENTON, N.J. » U.S. regulators want a narcotic painkiller involved in the opioid epidemic off the market amid data showing people continue to abuse it.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion said Thursday it has asked Endo Pharmaceut­icals, with U.S. headquarte­rs in East Whiteland, to stop selling its reformulat­ed, extended-release painkiller, Opana ER, after concluding the drugs’s risks outweigh its benefits.

It’s the first time the FDA has asked a drugmaker to remove an opioid painkiller from the market. The agency said it has seen a “significan­t shift” from people crushing and snorting Opana ER to get high to injecting it.

Endo said in a statement it’s “reviewing the request and is evaluating the full range of potential options.”

Wall Street responded quickly with a sell-off, and Endo shares plunged 13.4 percent to $11.93 in trading after U.S. markets closed.

The FDA move comes after advisers, reviewing the safety of Opana ER at a March hearing, voted 18-8 against keeping it on the market.

Besides contributi­ng to overdoses, abuse of Opana ER was blamed for a 2015 outbreak of HIV and hepatitis C in southern Indiana linked to sharing needles, according to the FDA.

“We are facing an opioid epidemic - a public health crisis, and we must take all necessary steps to reduce the scope of opioid misuse and abuse,” FDA Commission­er Dr. Scott Gottlieb said in a statement. “We will continue to take regulatory steps when we see situations where an opioid product’s risks outweigh its benefits.”

About 2 million Americans are addicted to prescripti­on opioids, and 91 die every day from overdosing on a painkiller or much-cheaper heroin.

Endo first got U.S. approval for its extended-release opioid, Opana ER, in 2006. It reformulat­ed that

drug in 2012 and claimed the changes made it harder to manipulate physically or chemically to abuse it. Endo tried to persuade FDA officials that the new formulatio­n was abuse-resistant, which likely would have given the product a marketing advantage in the crowded, lucrative category of opioid painkiller­s.

The FDA didn’t agree, refusing to let Endo market the new formulatio­n as abuse deterrent when it granted approval for sales several years ago.

If Endo doesn’t comply with the FDA’s request to stop selling Opana ER, the agency can hold a hearing and start a formal process for rescinding its approval.

According to the FDA, there are no generic versions of the reformulat­ed Opana ER on the market. However, generic versions of both the original Opana ER and the original immediate-release version, called oxymorphon­e ER, are on sale.

Those generic products might also face action by the FDA, which said it is “assessing the latest available data on abuse patterns.”

Endo Pharmaceut­icals makes generic pills and specialty drugs, which generally are expensive medicines for complex disorders. It’s part of Endo Internatio­nal plc, which is based in Dublin, Ireland, and has U.S. headquarte­rs near Malvern.

On Friday, Endo’s stock closed at $11.49 a share, down $2.29, or 16.62 percent.

Endo had about $4 billion in revenue last year, only $159 million of that from Opana.

 ?? PETE BANNNAN-DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA ?? Endo Pharmaceut­icals’ U.S. headquarte­rs in East Whiteland.
PETE BANNNAN-DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA Endo Pharmaceut­icals’ U.S. headquarte­rs in East Whiteland.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States