The Oklahoman

Move by FDA would help in fight against opioids

- BY JEFFREY A. SINGER, M.D. Singer practices general surgery in Phoenix and is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute.

In his Senate confirmati­on hearing for the role of secretary of Health and Human Services, nominee Alex Azar mentioned “fighting the scourge of the opioid epidemic” as one of four priorities that would guide him as head of the department.

Unfortunat­ely, Azar declined to further elaborate and the senators on the committee didn’t press him. They should have asked if he thinks the Food and Drug Administra­tion should reschedule naloxone as an over-the-counter drug. President Trump’s Commission on Combating Drug Addiction and the Opioid Crisis recommends increased access to this drug, yet has never mentioned such an obvious and meaningful proposal.

Naloxone, in use since 1971, blocks opioid receptors and reverses an opioid overdose. First responders across the nation are equipped with naloxone. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, at least 26,500 overdoses were reversed by individual­s without medical training using naloxone between 1996 and 2014.

Naloxone is not a controlled substance and has no effect on patients who are not receiving opioids. It has been recognized as easy to administer by laymen receiving minimal training, which is the rationale behind such products as auto-injectable Evzio and Narcan brand nasal spray.

Every state has passed laws making naloxone more available. However, because naloxone is still categorize­d by the FDA as a prescripti­on drug, every state has at least one health care profession­al interposed between the drug and the person who needs it. Some states still require a patient to receive a physician’s prescripti­on.

Because prescripti­on drugs can be provided to patients only by a health care profession­al licensed by the state, some states have eased naloxone distributi­on by legally authorizin­g licensed pharmacist­s to give out naloxone without a doctor’s prescripti­on. Others have employed “standing orders,” in which an authorized physician, such as a state’s director of public health services, authorizes pharmacist­s to distribute the naloxone to patients in need of the drug. In some states, third parties, such as close friends or relatives of patients chronicall­y taking opioids, are allowed to obtain naloxone this way. While these work-arounds have certainly helped improve access to the antidote, barriers still exist. For example, many people who are at risk of overdose are reluctant to seek naloxone from a pharmacist or other prescribin­g profession­al because of the stigma attached to their opioid use. And not all states allow third-parties to obtain naloxone on behalf of an atrisk associate or contact. Thus, there still aren’t enough people who get access to the lifesaving antidote. Ideally, a person should be able to grab the antidote off the shelf and head straight to the checkout counter.

Recognizin­g this, in 2016 regulators in Australia, a country that also has an opioid overdose crisis, reschedule­d naloxone to over-the-counter. Italy took the same step more than 20 years ago.

Interestin­gly, the FDA sees the value of moving naloxone to OTC status. In an August 2016 blog post, the FDA’s deputy director stated the agency would assist manufactur­ers in submitting applicatio­ns for OTC status. For OTC approval, manufactur­ers must first get approval of labeling and packaging informatio­n that can be understood by the general public.

The FDA has even created a draft label for over-the-counter use to facilitate drug manufactur­ers in petitionin­g for OTC rescheduli­ng. Yet even this is superfluou­s, as the auto-injectable naloxone and naloxone nasal spray were specifical­ly designed for use by the general public, and have been used by them successful­ly in the field for quite some time.

If the goal is to reduce deaths from opioid overdoses, the FDA commission­er should order an expedited review to reschedule naloxone as a non-prescripti­on drug. The secretary of Health and Human Services should lean on the commission­er if the agency remains passive. And if all else fails, Congress gets the last word.

 ??  ?? Dr. Jeffrey Singer
Dr. Jeffrey Singer

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