Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Painkiller maker stops sales at FDA request because of abuse

- By Linda A. Johnson

The maker of opioid painkiller Opana ER is pulling the drug off the market at the request of federal regulators because it’s being abused.

Endo Internatio­nal PLC said Thursday it will voluntaril­y stop selling the pills, approved for use in patients with severe, constant pain, after consulting with the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion. It’s the first opioid drug that the FDA has sought to remove from the market due to abuse.

The drugmaker said in a statement that the extended-release opioid is safe and effective when used as intended, and that Endo still believes Opana ER’s benefits outweigh its risks.

But last month, the FDA said it had concluded the drug is too risky. The agency said it had seen a “significan­t shift” from people crushing and snorting the pill to get high to injecting it instead. 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.

Opana ER got U.S. approval in 2006. In 2012, Endo changed the drug’s formulatio­n to try to make it harder to abuse. The FDA approved sales of the new version but refused to let Endo market deterrent.

The agency asked the company to stop selling Opana ER after its advisers, reviewing its safety at a March hearing, voted 18-8 against keeping it on the market.

Dublin, Ireland-based Endo, which has U.S. headquarte­rs in the Philadelph­ia suburb of Malvern, said it will work with the FDA to try to minimize disruption for patients, who will need to switch to alternativ­e treatments.

Endo primarily makes generic medicines, as well as a number of brand-name specialty drugs. Endo reported that Opana ER last year posted net sales of $159 million. The company it as abuse said it will take a pre-tax charge of about $20 million to write off the drug’s remaining value.

As of June, there were no generic versions of the reformulat­ed Opana ER on the market, according to the FDA, but two generics of earlier versions are on sale, called oxymorphon­e.

The agency said it would also review other opioid painkiller­s and could take further action.

U.S.-traded shares of Endo fell 1.9 percent to $11.17 Thursday, more than twice the rate of decline on a down day for the broader markets. When the FDA urged Endo to pull Opana ER on June 8, company shares plunged 13.4 percent.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This 2015 file photo shows the Food and Drug Administra­tion campus in Silver Spring, Md. On Thursday, Endo Internatio­nal PLC, the maker of painkiller Opana ER, said it will pull the extended-release opioid drug off the market, a month after being urged...
ASSOCIATED PRESS This 2015 file photo shows the Food and Drug Administra­tion campus in Silver Spring, Md. On Thursday, Endo Internatio­nal PLC, the maker of painkiller Opana ER, said it will pull the extended-release opioid drug off the market, a month after being urged...

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