AbbVie Inc., et al.; Proposal To Withdraw Approval of Abbreviated New Drug Applications for Prescription Pain Medications Containing More Than 325…
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Notice.
Citation: "79 FR 17156"
Document Number: "Docket No.
"Notices"
SUMMARY:
DATES: Submit written requests for a hearing by
ADDRESSES: Identify your requests for a hearing, supporting data, and other comments with Docket No.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In the
FDA did not receive a request for withdrawal of approval of an application containing more than 325 mg of acetaminophen per dosage unit from one sponsor. In addition,
With respect to those applications for which
Table 1 lists the applications for products for which
Table 1--Applications for Fixed-Combination Prescription Drugs Containing More Than 325 mg of Acetaminophen per Dosage Unit That Have Not Been Voluntarily Withdrawn as ofJanuary 14, 2014 Application No. Drug product(s) Applicant or Reason holder ANDA 40117 Vicodin HP AbbVie Inc., 1 N. Submitted a (Acetaminophen and Waukegan Rd., voluntary request Hydrocodone North Chicago, IL for withdrawal Bitartrate 60064 under S. Tablets), 660 314.150(c). mg/10 mg ANDA 88058 Vicodin AbbVie Inc Submitted a (Acetaminophen and voluntary request Hydrocodone for withdrawal Bitartrate under S. Tablets), 500 mg/5 314.150(c). mg ANDA 89736 Vicodin ES AbbVie Inc Submitted a (Acetaminophen and voluntary request Hydrocodone for withdrawal Bitartrate under S. Tablets), 750 314.150(c). mg/7.5 mg ANDA 89166 SYNALGOS-DC-A Leitner Did not submit a (Acetaminophen, Pharmaceuticals voluntary request Caffeine, and LLC, 340 Edgemont for withdrawal. Dihydrocodeine Ave., Bristol, TN Bitartrate 37620 Capsules), 356.4 mg/30 mg/16 mg ANDA 40366 Acetaminophen and Nesher Submitted a Hydrocodone Pharmaceuticals voluntary request Bitartrate Oral USA LLC, 13910 St. for withdrawal Solution, 500 Charles Rock Rd., under S. mg/15 mL; 7.5 Bridgeton, MO 314.150(c). mg/15 mL 63044 ANDA 40182 Acetaminophen and Pharmaceutical Submitted a Hydrocodone Associates, Inc., voluntary request Bitartrate Oral 201 Delaware St., for withdrawal, Solution, 500 Greenville, SC but failed to cite mg/15 mL; 7.5 29605 the appropriate mg/15 mL regulatory provision. ANDA 40825 Acetaminophen and Ranbaxy Submitted a Hydrocodone Laboratories Inc., voluntary request Bitartrate C/O Ranbaxy Inc., for withdrawal, Tablets, 500 mg/5 600 College Rd. but failed to cite mg East, Princeton, the appropriate NJ 08540 regulatory provision. ANDA 40824 Acetaminophen and Ranbaxy Submitted a Hydrocodone Laboratories Inc., voluntary request Bitartrate C/O Ranbaxy Inc., for withdrawal, Tablets, 500 mg/10 600 College Rd., but failed to cite mg East, Princeton, the appropriate NJ 08540 regulatory provision. ANDA 40822 Acetaminophen and Ranbaxy Submitted a Hydrocodone Laboratories Ltd., voluntary request Bitartrate C/O Ranbaxy Inc., for withdrawal, Tablets, 750 600 College Rd. but failed to cite mg/7.5 mg East, Ste. 2100, the appropriate Princeton, NJ regulatory 08540 provision. ANDA 040637 Acetaminophen, West-Ward Submitted a Caffeine, and Pharmaceutical voluntary request Dihydrocodeine Corp., 435 for withdrawal, Bitartrate Industrial Way but failed to cite Tablets, 712.8 West, Eatontown, the appropriate mg/60 mg/32 mg NJ 07724 regulatory provision.
Under section 505(e) of the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 355(e)) and
Therefore, in accordance with section 505(e) of the FD&C Act and SUBSEC 314.150 and 314.200 (21 CFR 314.150(a) and 314.200)), notice is given to the holders of the ANDAs listed in table 1, and to all other interested persons, that
Any holder that decides to seek a hearing must file: (1) On or before
Any other interested person may also submit comments on this notice on or before
The failure of a holder to file a timely written notice of participation and request for a hearing, as required by
A request for a hearing may not rely upon allegations or denials, but must present specific facts showing that there is a genuine and substantial issue of fact that requires a hearing. If it conclusively appears from the face of the data, information, and factual analyses in the request that there is no genuine and substantial issue of fact, the Commissioner of Food and Drugs will enter summary judgment against the person who requests the hearing, making findings and conclusions, and denying a hearing.
All submissions under this notice of opportunity for a hearing must be filed in four copies. Except for data and information prohibited from public disclosure under 21 U.S.C. 331(j) or 18 U.S.C. 1905, the submissions may be seen in the
The following is the text of the
I. Acetaminophen Drug Products and Liver Injury
Acetaminophen is the generic name of a drug used in many over-the-counter (OTC) oral pain-relievers such as Tylenol, and in prescription combination drug products such as Vicodin and Percocet. Acetaminophen is one of the most widely used drugs in
FOOTNOTE 1
All acetaminophen-containing prescription products are combinations with other drug ingredients, primarily opioids in various strengths. These other drug ingredients include the opioids hydrocodone bitartrate (e.g., Vicodin), oxycodone hydrochloride, (e.g., Percocet), codeine phosphate (e.g., Tylenol with Codeine), dihydrocodeine, tramadol hydrocholoride, and pentazocine hydrochloride, as well as butalbital (a barbiturate) and caffeine (a stimulant). /2/ General references to "acetaminophen combinations" or "acetaminophen combination products" in this notice refer to all such products. There are no prescription drug products that contain only acetaminophen.
FOOTNOTE 2 The opioid ingredient propoxyphene has also been widely used in combination with acetaminophen under the brand name Darvocet as well as in many generic products. On
Prescription combination drugs account for approximately 20 percent of the total acetaminophen drug market, and include some of the most widely prescribed and sold prescription drug products in
Acetaminophen-induced liver injury is caused by the effects of a toxic metabolite of acetaminophen, N-acetyl-p-benzoquinone imine (NAPQI) that is produced when acetaminophen is broken down by the body (Ref. 5). With low doses of acetaminophen, the amount of NAPQI produced is low and an individual's body usually has sufficient intracellular glutathione levels to bind to the NAPQI and prevent toxicity (Ref. 6). With higher acetaminophen levels and greater NAPQI production, NAPQI binds to liver proteins, causing cellular injury that can lead to liver failure and death (Refs. 4, 7).
The likelihood and severity of liver injury is influenced by the amount of acetaminophen that is ingested and the ability of an individual's liver to effectively remove it from the body. In most cases, glutathione levels are more than sufficient to conjugate the small amount of NAPQI produced by therapeutic doses of acetaminophen (Ref. 6). However, some people may have increased risk for liver injury following exposure to therapeutic doses or overdoses of acetaminophen due to reduced glutathione stores, induced cytochrome P450 enzymatic activity, or states of oxidative stress. Increased risk may be associated with a wide variety of conditions, such as Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome, chronic alcoholism, acute excess alcohol use, and use of anticonvulsant or antituberculosis medications (Refs. 8-9). Acetaminophen poisoning is treated with the drug N-acetylcysteine (NAC), which helps prevent toxicity by inactivating NAPQI. However, NAC does not reverse liver cell damage that has already occurred (Ref. 10).
The public health burden of acetaminophen-associated overdoses has been estimated using data from a variety of national databases and other resources. /3/ A summary of data from four different surveillance systems indicates that there were an estimated 56,000 emergency room visits, 26,000 hospitalizations, and 458 deaths per year related to acetaminophen-associated overdoses during the 1990s (Ref. 10). Within these estimates, unintentional acetaminophen overdose accounted for nearly 25 percent of the emergency department visits, 10 percent of the hospitalizations, and 25 percent of the deaths (Ref. 10).
FOOTNOTE 3 These include, among others: Emergency department data from the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System All Injury Program and the
Prescription products contribute significantly to the toll of liver damage from both unintentional and intentional acetaminophen overdoses. For example, in the study of ALF patients by Larson et al., 63 percent of the unintentionally overdosed subjects and 18 percent of intentionally overdosed subjects had taken prescription acetaminophen combination products prior to injury (Ref. 4). According to data from the Toxic Exposure Surveillance System (now named the National Poison Data System (NPDS)), 30 percent of all acetaminophen-associated calls to poison centers in 2005 involved prescription acetaminophen combination products (41,999 of 138,602 calls). Prescription acetaminophen combination products were involved in approximately 44 percent of acetaminophen-associated calls that resulted in serious injury (1,470 of 3,310 calls) and 48 percent (161 of 333 calls) of acetaminophen associated calls that resulted in fatalities (Ref 11). /4/
FOOTNOTE 4 The NPDS data include all acetaminophen-related calls, including calls relating to both prescription and OTC products, and calls that do not involve liver damage. "Serious injury" includes, but is not limited to, serious liver damage caused by acetaminophen. END FOOTNOTE
In addition, there is a high incidence of cases of unintentional acetaminophen overdose, which should be preventable. In a population-based study of ALF conducted in
There is no single factor that accounts for the high incidence of unintentional acetaminophen overdose. Multiple distinct factors appear to contribute to the problem, including the following:
* Given the large number and wide array of OTC and prescription acetaminophen products and indications, consumers may unintentionally overdose by taking more than one acetaminophen product at the same time without realizing that acetaminophen is a common ingredient.
* Patients may be unaware that their prescription pain relief products contain acetaminophen because the ingredient is often identified on pharmacy drug containers only as "APAP," an acronym based on the chemical name of acetaminophen (N-acetyl-para-aminophenol), or by an abbreviation such as "ACET." Such terms are not generally understood by the public to mean that a product contains acetaminophen.
* Patients may take more than the maximum number of labeled or prescribed doses seeking additional therapeutic benefit, unaware that they are taking too much acetaminophen.
* Experts agree that taking a large amount of acetaminophen over a short period of time causes liver injury, but a specific threshold dose for toxicity has not been established and may not be the same for all persons. Based on available information, we cannot currently identify all of the factors that might increase an individual's risk of acetaminophen toxicity, particularly at doses near the current recommended total daily dose of 4,000 mg per day (Refs. 5 and 7).
* NAC, the antidote for acetaminophen poisoning, is most effective when given in the first 8 hours after an acute overdose and has been shown to have benefit up to 24 hours and possibly later (Ref. 10). Victims of unintentional acetaminophen overdose may not be treated within that time because the symptoms of liver damage can take several days to emerge, even in severe cases, and are not readily associated by patients or clinicians with acetaminophen poisoning (Ref. 5).
* Patients do not realize that acetaminophen can cause severe liver injury if the recommended dose is exceeded. In 2004,
II.
FDA has been working to reduce the incidence of acetaminophen-related liver injury since the early 1990s, when the scope of the problem began to become evident. In addition to the scientific activities described in section I of this document, we have been active in acetaminophen safety education for consumers and health care professionals. In particular, we are currently working with the
Most importantly, as the
FOOTNOTE 5 Meeting of the
FOOTNOTE 6 2002 Advisory Committee Transcript,
FOOTNOTE 7 2002 Advisory Committee Transcript, supra at 182-221. END FOOTNOTE
In 2007, the Director of CDER convened a multidisciplinary working group in CDER to update, review, and report on the full range of medical data and to propose additional regulatory options for both prescription and OTC acetaminophen drug products. On
FOOTNOTE 8 Among other recommendations, 24 of the 37 Advisory Committee members recommended reducing the amount of acetaminophen per single adult dose in OTC products to 650 milligrams per dose (i.e., two 325 mg tablets or capsules). With respect to prescription products, the Advisory Committee overwhelmingly voted to require a boxed warning for prescription acetaminophen combinations, and slightly more than half favored eliminating prescription acetaminophen combinations entirely (with the option of prescribing single-entity opioids instead). While not offered as a voting option, the alternative of reducing the amount of acetaminophen per dosage unit in prescription combination products was recommended by a number of Advisory Committee members. See
FDA has determined that reducing the dosage unit strength of acetaminophen in prescription products is necessary to reduce the risk of liver injury associated with prescription acetaminophen combinations, and to ensure safe use of acetaminophen combinations.
III.
A. Safety Labeling Changes
Consistent with the advice of the 2009 Advisory Committee,
FOOTNOTE 9 Section 505(o)(4) of the FD&C Act also establishes the procedures for implementing safety labeling changes. The procedures include an opportunity for application holders to question the need for or specific wording of the labeling changes. END FOOTNOTE
The letters issued today propose that the sponsors of prescription acetaminophen drugs make various modifications to their drugs' approved labeling, including adding the following as a boxed warning:
Hepatotoxicity
[DRUG NAME] contains acetaminophen and [INGREDIENT]. Acetaminophen has been associated with cases of acute liver failure, at times resulting in liver transplant and death. Most of the cases of liver injury are associated with the use of acetaminophen at doses that exceed 4,000 milligrams per day, often in combination with other acetaminophen-containing products.
The safety labeling changes will be required for all prescription drug products containing acetaminophen. In accordance with section 505(o)(4)(B) of the FD&C Act, within 30 days of the date of the letters, the holders of approved applications for prescription acetaminophen drugs must submit to
However, we do not believe that these safety labeling changes alone will adequately address the ongoing problem of liver injury associated with prescription acetaminophen combinations. Accordingly, we are taking additional steps to reduce the amount of exposure to acetaminophen from these products, as described in the following discussion.
B. Limiting the Amount of Acetaminophen in Prescription Combination Products
1. How and Why We Are Limiting Acetaminophen Content
In light of the information described previously, we have re-evaluated the relative risks and benefits of prescription acetaminophen products and have concluded that acetaminophen prescription drugs containing more than 325 mg of acetaminophen per dosage unit (tablet or capsule) do not provide a sufficient margin of safety to protect the public against the serious risk of acetaminophen-induced liver injury. Accordingly, we are asking product sponsors to limit the maximum amount of acetaminophen per dosage unit of the combination product ("acetaminophen strength") to 325 mg. We are basing this change on multiple considerations, including the following:
* The significant contribution made by prescription products to the continued and unacceptably high incidence of acetaminophen-related liver injury;
* The need to establish an adequate margin of safety given the current inability to identify precise toxicity thresholds and/or specific populations for whom currently recommended dosages are not safe;
* The high potential for unintentional overdosing; and
* The lack of evidence from which to conclude that the benefit of increased pain relief or dosing convenience from higher acetaminophen strengths outweighs the risk of liver damage from unintentional overdose.
The intended effect of reducing the amount of acetaminophen to 325 mg per dosage unit is to reduce the potential for exceeding the toxic threshold of the drug that could cause liver injury. This change is intended to reduce the risk of unintentional acetaminophen overdose by providing an additional margin of safety for all users, including individuals who, for a variety of reasons (e.g., existing liver disease, chronic alcohol use) are particularly susceptible to liver injury from acetaminophen. The change is consistent with the fundamental principle that the benefit-to-risk ratio of a drug must be considered in determining safety and effectiveness, and the safety of a drug can only be established if its benefits outweigh its known and potential risks. Additionally, as discussed in the following section, many acetaminophen combinations are already approved at the 325-mg acetaminophen strength and thus can provide a basis for further generic approvals at the new maximum dosage unit strength.
It is not possible, based on currently available information, to quantify precisely to what extent reducing the maximum acetaminophen strength of acetaminophen combination drugs will reduce the incidence of liver injury. However, data from Larson et al. (Ref. 4) suggest that the effect could be considerable. In that study, the median dose of acetaminophen taken by 77 people with an unintentional overdose was 7,500 mg per day. Assuming that they took 500 mg tablets (currently the most common prescription and OTC dosage strength), the total median dose for this group from taking the same number (15) of 325-mg tablets or capsules would have been only 4,875 mg, a level at which death or liver failure is unlikely to occur in most people.
2. How FDA Is Implementing the Limitation on Acetaminophen Strength
We have identified prescription acetaminophen drug products and product sponsors potentially affected by this notice based on information in the list of Approved Drug Products With Therapeutic Equivalence Evaluations (the Orange Book). /10/ Table 1 of this document provides an overview of approved new drug applications for currently marketed acetaminophen combination products grouped according to their active ingredients and acetaminophen strengths. /11/
FOOTNOTE 10 Detailed Orange Book listings, including specific application numbers and sponsors, can be viewed electronically by accessing
FOOTNOTE 11 The figures in table 1 of this document do not include approved applications for combination products that are subject to the recently announced market withdrawal due to safety concerns related to propoxyphene. The table also excludes various approved combinations that are not currently marketed. These include: Acetaminophen; butalbital; caffeine; codeine (1 approved application with acetaminophen strength = 325 mg); acetaminophen; caffeine; dihydrocodeine bitartrate (5 applications with acetaminophen strengths >325 mg;) acetaminophen; codeine phosphate (1 application with acetaminophen strength over 325 mg); acetaminophen; hydrocodone in solution dosage form (3 applications with acetaminophen strengths = 325 mg; 6 with acetaminophen strengths >325 mg). END FOOTNOTE
Table 2--Overview of Currently Marketed Prescription Acetaminophen Products Ingredient N *--All Acetaminophe N *-- Acetaminophe N *-- combination Acetamino- n strengths Acetaminophe n strengths Acetaminophe phen =325 mg n strengths >325 mg n strengths strengths = 325 mg >325 Acetamino- 4 325 mg; 50 2 650 mg; 50 1. phen; mg Tablets mg Tablets Butalbital 650 mg; 50 1. mg Capsules Total: 2 Total: 2. Acetamino- 16 300 mg; 50 1 500 mg; 50 6. phen; mg; 40 mg mg; 40 mg Butalbital; Capsules Tablets Caffeine 325 mg; 50 6 500 mg; 50 1. mg; 40 mg mg; 40 mg Tablets Capsules 325 mg; 50 1 750 mg; 50 1. mg; 40 mg mg; 40 mg Capsules Tablet Total: 8 Total: 8. Acetamino- 24 300 mg; 15 6 None 0. phen Codeine mg Tablets Phosphate 300 mg; 30 10 mg Tablets 300 mg; 60 8 mg Tablets Total: 24 Total: 0. Acetamino- 88 300 mg; 5 mg 1 400 mg; 5 mg 1. phen; Tablets Tablets Hydrocodone 300 mg; 7.5 1 400 mg; 7.5 1. mg Tablets mg Tablets 300 mg; 10 1 400 mg; 10 1. mg Tablets mg Tablets 325 mg; 2.5 1 500 mg; 2.5 4. mg Tablets mg Tablets 325 mg; 5 mg 5 500 mg; 5 mg 12. Tablets Tablets 325 mg; 7.5 5 500 mg; 7.5 7. mg Tablets mg Tablets 325 mg; 10 7 500 mg; 10 7. mg Tablets mg Tablets Total: 21 500 mg; 5 mg 2. Capsules 650 mg; 5 mg 1. Tablets 650 mg; 7.5 7. mg Tablets 7. 6. 9. 2. Total: 67. Acetamino- 300 mg; 5 mg 1 400 mg; 5 mg 1. phen; Tablets Tablets Hydrocodone 300 mg; 7.5 1 400 mg; 7.5 1. mg Tablets mg Tablets 300 mg; 10 1 400 mg; 10 1. mg Tablets mg Tablets 325 mg; 2.5 1 500 mg; 2.5 4. mg Tablets mg Tablets 325 mg; 5 mg 5 500 mg; 5 mg 12. Tablets Tablets 325 mg; 7.5 5 500 mg; 7.5 7. mg Tablets mg Tablets 325 mg; 10 7 500 mg; 10 7. mg Tablets mg Tablets Total: 21 500 mg; 5 mg 2. Capsules 650 mg; 5 mg 1. Tablets 650 mg; 7.5 7. mg Tablets 650 mg; 10 7. mg Tablets 660 mg; 10 6. mg Tablets 750 mg; 7.5 9. mg Tablets 750 mg; 10 2. mg Tablets Total: 67. Acetamino- 49 300 mg; 2.5 1 400 mg; 2.5 1. phen; mg Tablets mg Tablets Oxycodone HCI 300 mg; 5 mg 1 400 mg; 5 mg 1. Tablets Tablets 300 mg; 7.5 1 400 mg; 7.5 1. mg Tablets mg Tablets 300 mg; 10 1 400 mg; 10 1. mg Tablets mg Tablets 325 mg; 2.5 2 500 mg; 5 mg 1. mg Tablets Tablets 325 mg; 5 mg 8 500 mg; 75 5. Tablets mg Tablets 325 mg; 7.5 4 500 mg; 10 1. mg Tablets mg Tablets 325 mg; 10 5 500 mg; 5 mg 8. mg Tablets Capsules 325 mg/5 ml; 2 650 mg; 5 mg 4. 5 mg/5 ml Tablets Oral Solution Total: 25 650 mg; 10 1. mg Tablets Total: 24. Acetamino- 2 None 0 650 mg; EQ 2. phen; 25 mg BASE Pentazocine Tablets HCI Total: 0 Total: 2. Acetamino- 6 325 mg; 37.5 6 0. phen; mg Tablets Tramadol HCL Total: 6 None Total: 0. Grand Total: Total: 86 Total: 103. 189 * N = number of approved applications.
As shown in table 1 of this document, there are 7 different prescription acetaminophen combinations currently marketed under a total of 189 approved active applications. The applications are held by a total number of 26 sponsors. Products with approved acetaminophen strengths of 325 mg or less per dosage unit ("lower acetaminophen strengths") account for slightly fewer than half (86) of the approved applications but are much less widely marketed and prescribed than products with higher acetaminophen strengths.
We anticipate that drug sponsors who request that
We anticipate that in virtually all cases the fastest and least burdensome route to approval for new lower acetaminophen strength versions of existing higher acetaminophen strength products will be through new
FOOTNOTE 12 For historical reasons, virtually all currently approved applications for prescription acetaminophen combination products are ANDAs rather than NDAs. Unlike NDAs, which may be supplemented to reflect changes in unit dosage strength or other product characteristics, products marketed under an approved
We are establishing a timeframe for responding to this notice that takes into account the estimated time needed for sponsors to obtain necessary approvals and begin to market new products with lower acetaminophen strengths. We believe that a period of 3 years from publication of this notice in the
We strongly encourage sponsors of combination prescription products with acetaminophen strengths greater than 325 mg to submit requests for withdrawal of those products' approved applications under
We are issuing this notice because we believe that voluntary action on the part of product sponsors to reduce the acetaminophen strengths of prescription acetaminophen combinations can achieve the needed increase in patient safety substantially sooner and with less burden on public and private resources than alternative regulatory measures. However,
IV. References
FDA has verified the Web site address in this reference section, but we are not responsible for any subsequent changes to the Web site after this document publishes in the
1.
2. Schiodt, F. V. et al., "Acetaminophen Toxicity in an
3. Bower, W. A. et al., "Population-Based Surveillance for Acute Liver Failure,"
4. Larson, A. M. et al., "Acetaminophen-Induced Acute Liver Failure: Results of a United States Multicenter, Prospective Study," Hepatology, 42:1364-72, 2005.
5. Larson, A. M., "Acetaminophen Hepatotoxicity," Clinical Liver Disease, 11:525-48, vi, 2007.
6. Holme, J. A. et al., "Cytotoxic Effects of N-acetyl-p-Benzoquinone Imine, a Common Arylating Intermediate of Paracetamol and N-hydroxyparacetamol," Biochemical Pharmacology, Feb. 1:33(3), 1984.
7. James, L. P. et al., "Pharmacokinetics of Acetaminophen--Protein Adducts in Adults With Acetaminophen Overdose and Acute Liver Failure," Drug Metabolism and Disposition 37:1779-1784, 2009.
8. Lee W., Drug-Induced Hepatotoxicity,
9. Smilkstein, M. J. et al., "Efficacy of Oral N-Acetylcysteine in the Treatment of Acetaminophen Overdose, Analysis of the National Multicenter Study (1976 to 1985),"
10. Nourjah, P. et al, "Estimates of Acetaminophen (Paracetamol)-induced Overdoses in
11. Lai, M. W. et al., "2005 Annual Report of the
Dated:
Director,
[FR Doc. 2014-06802 Filed 3-26-14;
BILLING CODE 4160-01-P
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