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FDA Drug Safety Podcasts
Measures Undertaken to Address Concerns about Marketing of Unapproved Drugs


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You are listening to ReachMD XM157, the channel for medical professionals. Welcome to the FDA Voice, a program discussing the US Food and Drug Administration and its role in protecting and promoting your health. Your host is Dr Charles Turck, clinical instructor at the Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences.

DR. CHARLES TURCK:
The Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act generally requires drugs to be both safe and effective prior to marketing and widespread use, but despite this act not all marketed drugs have undergone FDA approval. What measures has the FDA undertaken to address concerns about marketing unapproved drugs? Welcome to the FDA Voice. I am your host Dr. Charles Turck and with me today is Dr. Jason Woo. Dr. Woo is the Associate Director for Scientific and Medical Affairs in the Office of Compliance for the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research of the FDA. We are talking today about the marketing of unapproved drugs and how the FDA is addressing this key issue.
Dr. Woo, do we have any estimates on how many unapproved drugs there are on the market today?

DR. JASON WOO:
Sure, Dr. Turck. Thanks again for this opportunity. We estimate that about 2% of the types of prescribed drug products that are on the market are unapproved.

DR. CHARLES TURCK:
It's a small percentage, but nonetheless, it's still a percentage. How is it that these unapproved drugs made it onto the market in the first place?

DR. JASON WOO:
Well, a lot of these have been around for some time and were being marketed in some form before Congress made changes to the law that required drugs be approved by (01:30) the FDA and we have worked over the years to address most of these changes and most drug products available to consumers meet the approval requirements of the law. However, there are some manufacturers who have not gone through the submission process of providing required information of their drug products, the safety information, the efficacy and manufacturing specifications that are needed to get FDA approval. It's not that FDA doesn't allow these drugs to be marketed illegally; we simply don’t have the sufficient resources to identify and pursue them all at once. As in most circumstances, we focus our limited resources where they will do the most good, giving the highest priority to drugs with known safety risks, drugs that lack evidence of the effectiveness. In some cases, FDA action on drug products requiring approval has to be gradual to avoid creating shortages of products that are medically necessary.

DR. CHARLES TURCK:
Now, just to be clear, we are not just talking about using FDA approved prescription meds for off label uses, we are talking about the actual presence of unapproved products on the market.

DR. JASON WOO:
Correct. The off-label use of approved drugs is something, which falls under the practice of medicine. Providers, if they feel that an improved product is warranted for another use, may choose to treat their patient that way. We are talking about drugs that have actually never gone through the approval process where information has not been submitted to the agency that verifies, you know, that the drug has been tested in the appropriate populations and shown to be safe and efficacious and also, just as importantly, where the manufacturer has not provided the information that they can manufacture the drugs so that the drug is manufactured to the level of purity and potency that is expected (03:00) of the consumer. In addition, there are labeling concerns to make sure that the drug has any appropriate information that is necessary for the prescriber and the patient to use the drug safely.

DR. CHARLES TURCK:
I was wondering if you could provide a little history or background behind the legislative changes that led to the current presence of unapproved meds.

DR. JASON WOO:
Well, the original Pure Food and Drugs Act was passed in 1906 as a result of a lot of problems in the marketplace with many different types of foods and medicinal products. It was essentially the Wild, Wild West of medicine at that time, but after a number of good articles including the book "The Jungle" by Upton Sinclair and a series of articles outlying the way many of the medicinal products were sold, the government decided to enact the Pure Food and Drugs and Cosmetic Act. At that time, it basically required the drugs be not tainted with any type of putrid material. It wasn’t until 1938 that the safety of drugs became required. In 1937, there was the elixir sulfanilamide episode where a company was marketing an antibiotic treatment and decided to change the formulation into a liquid product where in doing so they mixed it with a chemical called diethylene glycol, which is nowadays basically known as antifreeze, but that subsequently led to over 100 deaths across the country, many in children, which subsequently led to the enactment of the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (04:30) in 1938. After that in 1962, there was another episode with the drug thalidomide, which had been approved in Europe, but thanks to the work of an FDA official, a medical officer, was not approved for use in the United States. After the use in Europe, though, discovered that there were a number of congenital abnormalities or birth defects that were associated with that drug, the congress enacted the modern Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act which now required drugs to be not just safe but also efficacious.

DR. CHARLES TURCK:
Some of the unapproved medications that are currently on the market are the holdovers from the periods before 1962 then?

DR. JASON WOO:
Well, the way the law is written, it emphasizes that drugs not only should the drug ingredient itself be shown to have been safe and efficacious, but the manufacturing also needs to be modernized as well as the labeling. So, many of these drugs have been around for many years, for example, morphine is an example of a drug that has been around for 100s of years. However, the way that morphine was manufactured has changed over time and certainly the way the drug is labeled has changed. So, you have some manufacturers out there who continue to make the drugs without having submitted the information again of safety and efficacy to the Agency and again with the information that demonstrates they can manufacture the drugs safely and with the appropriate labeling information that will allow consumers and prescribers to use that drug safely.

DR. CHARLES TURCK:
So it's then possible to say have an active ingredient like morphine have (06:00) one formulation by one manufacturer be approved by the FDA and then another formulation not be approved by the FDA.

DR. JASON WOO:
That is correct.

DR. CHARLES TURCK:
If you are just joining us, you are listening to the FDA voice on ReachMD XM 157, the channel for medical professionals. I am Dr. Charles Turck and I am speaking with Dr. Jason Woo, Associate Director for Scientific and Medical Affairs in the Office of Compliance in the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research of the FDA. We are talking about the marketing of unapproved drugs and how the FDA is responding to the issue.

Dr. Woo, could you give some examples of previously unapproved drugs that proved unsafe or ineffective?

DR. JASON WOO:
Sure, one example was in 1983 when it was discovered that a very high potency intravenous injection drug named E-Ferol was associated with adverse reactions in about a 100 premature infants and that resulted in over 40 deaths. Quinine is another good example. As an unapproved drug, it was widely used for the treatment of leg cramps, though the Agency had many reports of patients who died because of manufacturer's application for the use of the drug as a treatment for malaria though specifically warns against its use for leg cramps because it is shown to be ineffective and unsafe for this condition.

Another recent example was the use of hydrocodone products as cough suppressants for pediatric patients. No hydrocodone, has been established as safe and effective for cough suppression in children up to 6 years of age, but some of these unapproved drugs carried labels with dosing instructions for children as young as 2 years of age. In addition, we had received reports of medication (07:30) errors associated with formulation and name changes and unapproved hydrocodone products and reports of confusion over the similarity of a number of the names of the unapproved products with the approved drug products. As part of the drug approval process, the agency considers the possibility of medication errors and name confusion so that potential safety issues associated with these factors can be minimized by having all drug products go through the approval process. So in September 2007, the FDA took actions to stop the marketing of unapproved hydrocodone products and these are just some of the examples of the safety problems that unapproved drugs present.

DR. CHARLES TURCK:
What are some other concerns that the FDA has about the safety and efficacy of unapproved drugs?

DR. JASON WOO:
Well, we have got several concerns. The first as we discussed earlier: unapproved drugs that have not been submitted to the rigorous scientific evaluation that occurs during the drug approval process. Therefore, they may not meet the modern evidence standards and expectations for safety and effectiveness. Secondly, the FDA drug approval process provides the review of product-specific information that is critical to ensuring safety and efficacy of the finished drug product. By this, I mean that there is manufacturing processes and information that demonstrates that the manufacturer or sponsor can reliably produce the drug products to the expected level of identity, strength, quality, and purity. In addition, FDA's review and approval of the applicant labeling ensures that healthcare professionals and patients have the information necessary to understand a drug product’s risks and its safe and effective use. So, all three of these factors including one the lack of evidence supporting safety and effectiveness, two the lack of review of manufacturer's drug specific production capability, (09:00) and three the lack of review of the information on the drug product labeled essential for the safe and effective use of that drug. These all raise significant safety concerns for the FDA about these unapproved drug products.

DR. CHARLES TURCK:
So we have the status of the problem, the presence of unapproved drugs on the US market. Now, what's the FDA doing about it?

DR. JASON WOO:
Well, the agency understands the need to provide assistance to firms unfamiliar with the drug approval process to help them secure approval for unapproved drugs that they are currently marketing and we are committed to a proactive action to facilitate voluntary compliance by these companies. As part of our commitment, we appointed an unapproved drugs coordinator in the Office of New Drugs to assist firms in obtaining information on the application process. In addition, in January 2007, we had a workshop to educate companies about the drug application and over-the-counter monograph processes and to give them some direction on how to bring the products into compliance. We have also assured companies that just approaching the agency to seek ways to bring their products into compliance will not on its own result in the agency initiating an enforcement action against them. We, in fact, continue to work with the number of these firms who had approached the agency seeking ways to bring their products into compliance through the approval process.

DR. CHARLES TURCK:
Now the workshops that you mentioned, has the attendance been good? Have they been successful?

DR. JASON WOO:
We had a sellout for the workshop that we held back in 2007, and in fact we had to open up two additional rooms to allow for all the attendees.

DR. CHARLES TURCK:
Changing tracks for just a moment, and many of our listeners hear about or apply anecdotal experience in writing for prescription drugs that have been approved, but using them to treat unapproved indications. What’s the FDA's stance (10:30) on this?

DR. JASON WOO:
Well, for an unapproved drug product, a patient or prescriber may believe that a drug is safe or effective because of that individual experience, but FDA has found that the subjective experiences can be misleading and are really insufficient to establish a drug’s safety and effectiveness. In fact, when FDA first reviewed the clinical information available after the 1962 law change that required drugs to be proven to be both safe and effective, only 12% of the drugs reviewed were found to be effective despite the widespread use of many of these drugs by physicians based on their anecdotal experience, so FDA relies really on carefully designed clinical trials that weigh the risks and benefits of taking a drug compared with taking a placebo or another accepted therapy, and in many cases FDA finds that the original hypothesis that a drug is safe and effective isn't correct. Carefully designed clinical trials have repeatedly demonstrated that the safety and effectiveness of drugs can't be adequately established from anecdotal evidence or consumer or prescriber preferences. Another concern with anecdotal experiences is that even if there is no affirmative evidence of the safety problem with the specific drug that is not proof of the absence of a problem. We know safety and efficacy problems can be difficult or impossible to detect without well controlled studies in larger populations and drug failures or adverse effects may be masked by an individual patient's disease or wrongly attributed to another cause, so indeed history has shown that reliance on physicians’ anecdotal clinical experiences are insufficient to establish a drug safety and efficacy. That is not to say that the off-label use of a drug should be prohibited. In fact, that is clearly the way (12:00) some drugs are developed for new uses. However, that is different from an unapproved drug because at least with an approved drug being used for an off-label use, the manufacturers submitted the information so that the prescriber knows what the safe dosage levels may be for that drug, also what the spectrum of side effects are to be expected from that drug product. The same cannot be said for the unapproved drugs because we don’t have any of that information available.

DR. CHARLES TURCK:
Dr. Jason Woo has been our guest on the FDA Voice. I am Dr. Charles Turck and we have been discussing unapproved drugs and the FDA's response to this critical issue.

 

You have been listening to the FDA Voice, a program featuring the US Food and Drug Administration. For more details on this week's show or to download this segment, visit us at reachmd.com and tour the FDA Center for Drug Evaluation and Research website at fda.gov/cder. Thank you for listening.


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Date created: October 10, 2008