The Commercial Appeal

FDA to weigh birth control sold without prescripti­on

Company seeks approval for over-the-counter pills

- Matthew Perrone

WASHINGTON – For the first time, a pharmaceut­ical company has asked for permission to sell a birth control pill over the counter in the U.S.

HRA Pharma’s applicatio­n on Monday sets up a high-stakes decision for health regulators amid legal and political battles over women’s reproducti­ve health. The company says the timing was unrelated to the Supreme Court’s recent decision overturnin­g Roe v. Wade.

Hormone-based pills have long been the most common form of birth control in the U.S., used by millions of women since the 1960s. They have always required a prescripti­on, generally so health profession­als can screen for conditions that raise the risk of rare, but dangerous, blood clots.

The French drugmaker’s applicatio­n compiles years of research intended to convince the Food and Drug Administra­tion that women can safely screen themselves for those risks and use the pill effectivel­y.

“For a product that has been available for the last 50 years, that has been used safely by millions of women, we thought it was time to make it more available,” said Frederique Welgryn, HRA’S chief strategy officer.

An FDA approval could come next year and would only apply to HRA’S pill, which would be sold under its original brand name, Opill. The company acquired the decades-old drug from Pfizer in 2014, but it’s not currently marketed in the U.S.

Reproducti­ve rights advocates want

to see other prescripti­on contracept­ives move over the counter and, eventually, for abortion pills to do the same.

That potential for a precedent-setting decision once again places the FDA under an intense political spotlight.

Late last year, the agency was condemned by abortion opponents and praised by women’s rights advocates when it loosened access to abortion pills. The agency faced similar political pressures in 2006 when it approved over-the-counter use of the emergency contracept­ion pill Plan B.

Many conservati­ve groups stress they are only interested in curtailing abortion, and state bans often explicitly exclude contracept­ion.

Even before Monday’s announceme­nt, Democratic lawmakers were calling on the FDA to swiftly consider any such requests.

Many common medication­s have made the switch from behind the pharmacy counter, including drugs for pain

relief, heartburn and allergies.

In each case, companies must show that consumers can understand the drug’s labeling, evaluate its risks and use it safely and effectivel­y without profession­al supervisio­n. HRA spent seven years conducting the Fda-required studies.

Behind the company’s efforts is a coalition of women’s health researcher­s and advocates who have worked for nearly two decades to make contracept­ives more accessible, especially to groups with less access to health care.

The Oral Contracept­ives Over-thecounter Working Group helped fund some of HRA’S research and is mobilizing support behind a media campaign dubbed Free the Pill.

Birth control pills are available without a prescripti­on across much of South America, Asia and Africa. Last year, Paris-based HRA won U.K. approval for the first birth control pill available there without a prescripti­on.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I/AP ?? Hormone-based pills have long been the most common form of birth control in the U.S., used by millions of women since the 1960s.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I/AP Hormone-based pills have long been the most common form of birth control in the U.S., used by millions of women since the 1960s.

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