Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategies for Certain Opioid Drugs; Notice of Public Meeting, 17967-17970 [E9-8992]
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
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Food and Drug Administration
[Docket No. FDA–2009–N–0143]
Risk Evaluation and Mitigation
Strategies for Certain Opioid Drugs;
Notice of Public Meeting
AGENCY:
Food and Drug Administration,
HHS.
ACTION: Notice of public meeting;
request for comments.
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SUMMARY: The Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) is announcing a
public meeting to obtain input on
developing Risk Evaluation and
Mitigation Strategies (REMS) for certain
opioid drugs. The REMS would be
intended to ensure that the benefits of
these drugs continue to outweigh
certain risks. The agency has long been
concerned about adverse events
associated with this class of drug and
has taken steps in cooperation with drug
manufacturers to address these risks.
We intend to use the agency’s REMS
authority under the Food and Drug
Administration Amendments Act of
2007 (FDAAA) to mitigate the risks of
these drugs. The purpose of the public
meeting is to receive information and
comments on this topic.
DATES: The public meeting will be held
on May 27 and 28, 2009, from 8 a.m. to
5 p.m. Register to attend the meeting by
May 15, 2009. See section III of this
document for information on how to
register or make an oral presentation at
the meeting. Written or electronic
comments will be accepted until June
30, 2009.
ADDRESSES: The public meeting will be
held at the Hilton Washington, DC
North/Gaithersburg Hotel, 620 Perry
Pkwy., Gaithersburg, MD 20877. Submit
written comments to the Division of
Dockets Management (HFA–305), Food
and Drug Administration, 5630 Fishers
Lane, rm. 1061. Rockville, MD 20852.
Submit electronic comments to https://
www.regulations.gov. All comments
should be identified with the docket
number found in brackets in the
heading of this document. Transcripts of
the meeting will be available for review
at the Division of Dockets Management
and on the Internet at https://
www.regulations.gov approximately 30
days after the meeting.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Theresa (Terry) Martin, Center for Drug
Evaluation and Research, Food and
Drug Administration, 10903 New
Hampshire Ave., Bldg. 51, rm. 6184,
Silver Spring, MD 20993–0002, 301–
796–3448, FAX: 301–847–8752, or Anne
Henig, Center for Drug Evaluation and
Research, Food and Drug
Administration, 10903 New Hampshire
Ave., Bldg 51, rm. 6176, Silver Spring,
MD 20993–0002, 301–796–3442, FAX:
301–847–8753, email:
OpioidREMS@fda.hhs.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
FDAAA (Public Law 110–85) created
section 505–1 of the Federal Food, Drug,
and Cosmetic Act (the act) (21 U.S.C.
355–1). Under section 505–1 of the act,
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FDA may require a REMS when FDA
determines that a REMS is necessary to
ensure the benefits of a drug outweigh
the risks associated with the drug. On
February 6, 2009, FDA sent letters to
manufacturers of certain opioid drug
products, indicating that these drugs
will be required to have a REMS to
ensure that the benefits of the drugs
continue to outweigh the risks. An
example of the text of these letters is
available on the agency’s Web site at
https://www.fda.gov/cder/drug/infopage/
opioids/meeting_template.pdf. A table
of opioid products that may be required
to have REMS is also available on the
agency’s Web site at https://
www.fda.gov/cder/drug/infopage/
opioids/Opioid_Products_chart.htm.
Copies of these documents may also be
requested from Terry Martin or Anne
Henig (see FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT).
The affected opioid drugs include
brand name and generic products and
are formulated with the following active
ingredients: Fentanyl, hydromorphone,
methadone, morphine, oxycodone, and
oxymorphone. The REMS would be
intended to ensure that the benefits of
these drugs continue to outweigh the
risks associated with: (1) Use of high
doses of long acting opioids and
extended release opioid products in
non-opioid tolerant and inappropriately
selected individuals; (2) abuse; (3)
misuse; and (4) overdose, both
accidental and intentional. REMS for
opioids would likely include elements
to assure safe use to ensure that
prescribers, dispensers, and patients are
aware of and understand the risks and
how these products should be used. The
purpose of this meeting is to examine
specific features of REMS for these
drugs and provide interested persons an
opportunity to comment. The meeting
will also address issues associated with
creating and implementing the REMS
and evaluating its effectiveness.
A. Opioids
Opioid drugs have effects similar or
identical to those of opiates produced
naturally in the opium poppy. On the
molecular level, they act at protein sites
called opioid receptors, which are found
in the brain, spinal cord, gastrointestinal
tract, peripheral nerve terminals, and
other peripheral sites. The actions of
these drugs at certain opioid receptors
in the brain, spinal cord, and other sites
can effectively block the transmission of
pain messages to the brain. Opioid
drugs currently marketed in the United
States for pain relief include products
formulated with active ingredients such
as fentanyl, hydromorphone,
methadone, morphine, oxycodone, and
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oxymorphone. Individual patients
respond differently to different opioid
drug substances, and some patients
develop tolerance to the effects of a
particular opioid after chronic exposure.
Physicians use a technique known as
‘‘opioid rotation’’ whereby they switch
a patient from one opioid to another if
the patient develops tolerance to the
drug’s analgesic effects and cannot get
adequate pain relief from any single
drug.
Some opioids are naturally long
acting; others are incorporated into
extended release formulations. Long
acting opioids and extended release
opioid formulations are often useful for
the management of persistent, moderate
to severe pain in patients requiring
continuous, around-the-clock pain relief
for an extended period of time. Long
acting products allow these patients to
have their pain controlled for long
periods of time without the need for
another dose and to significantly reduce
the number of tablets the patient must
take each day. Therefore, having long
acting opioids and extended release
opioid formulations available provides
important pain relief options for
patients who require management of
persistent, moderate to severe pain.
The expected duration of treatment
with long acting opioids and extended
release opioid formulations ranges from
a few weeks to months or longer. In
some cases, moderate to severe pain
requiring continuous, around-the-clock
opioid therapy is associated with a
serious condition that is unlikely to
improve.
These types of opioids are widely
prescribed, posing challenges for the
development of REMS for these
products. Long acting and extended
release opioid formulations were used
by nearly 4 million patients in the
United States in 2007. Physicians who
prescribe and administer long acting
and extended release opioid drugs
practice in a wide variety of areas
including family practice,
anesthesiology, internal medicine,
orthopedic surgery, physiatry,
neurology, rheumatology, oncology, and
other areas. A REMS, to adequately
manage the risks of these products
without unduly burdening the health
care system or reducing patient access
to these medications, must be carefully
designed.
B. Adverse Events Associated With
Opioids
The most serious of the known
adverse events associated with opioid
pain relievers are: Respiratory
depression, central nervous system
depression, addiction, and death.
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Adverse events are associated with
improper dosing, indication, and patient
selection, as well as with abuse and
addiction. For example, some products
and doses are indicated only for the
management of persistent moderate to
severe pain in patients who have
demonstrated opioid tolerance. Use of
these products in non-opioid-tolerant
patients may result in fatal respiratory
depression. In other cases, when
extended release products are
intentionally crushed or dissolved, the
controlled-release mechanism may be
defeated, allowing a large dose to be
taken at once. This presents a risk of
fatal overdose, particularly in
individuals who are not tolerant to
opioids.
C. Efforts to Address the Risks of Opioid
Use
FDA and drug manufacturers have
taken steps to decrease abuse and
misuse of long acting opioids and
extended release opioids while seeking
to ensure that they remain available for
patients who suffer daily from chronic
pain. Since 2001, FDA has required
boxed warnings, the agency’s strongest
warning, on the labeling of long acting
opioid drugs to educate physicians and
patients on the risks and proper uses of
these products. The agency has also
required risk management plans for
many of these products. These plans
have incorporated educational programs
for prescribers, pharmacists, and
patients, and surveillance systems to
monitor for signals of increasing abuse,
misuse, and diversion, as well as plans
for intervention when these signals are
noted. In addition, drug manufacturers
have sought to incorporate features into
their products intended to deter abuse.
For example, the active ingredient may
be incorporated into a matrix from
which it cannot easily be extracted or
that is not easily ground into powder. In
other cases, an opioid antagonist is
sequestered in the inner core of an
extended release tablet, designed to be
released if the tablet is crushed or
dissolved.
D. REMS for Long Acting and Extended
Release Opioids
Despite existing efforts to address the
risks associated with opioid drugs,
misuse and abuse are increasing. Data
from multiple sources, including the
Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and
the Substance Abuse and Mental Health
Services Administration (SAMHSA),
indicate increasing misuse and abuse of
prescription opioid analgesic
medications over the past decade. For
example, SAMHSA’s National Survey
on Drug Use and Health estimates that
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11 million Americans over the age of 12,
or 4.7 percent of that population, took
pain relievers for nonmedical use in
2002. That number increased to 12.5
million, or 5.0 percent of the population
over 12, in 2007. Likewise, data
compiled by SAMHSA show a
significant increase from 2000 to 2006
in admissions to substance abuse
treatment services for individuals
abusing opioid analgesics. Much of this
misuse has involved the extended
release opioid analgesics and
methadone. To address this public
health problem, the agency has
indicated it will require REMS for
certain opioid products.
Section 505–1 of the act authorizes
FDA to require persons submitting
certain drug approval applications to
submit a proposed REMS as part of the
application. FDA may require a REMS
when FDA determines that a REMS is
necessary to ensure the benefits of the
drug outweigh the risks associated with
the drug. Section 505–1 of the act also
authorizes FDA to require holders of
certain drug applications approved
without a REMS to submit a proposed
REMS if the agency becomes aware of
new safety information and makes a
determination that a REMS is necessary
to ensure the benefits of the drug
outweigh the risks. Once FDA notifies
the holder of an approved covered
application that a REMS is necessary,
the holder must submit a proposed
REMS within 120 days, or within such
other reasonable time as FDA requires.
Every REMS must include a timetable
for the submission of assessments of the
REMS. A REMS may also include a
Medication Guide (as provided in 21
CFR part 208), a patient package insert,
a communication plan, and certain
‘‘elements to assure safe use.’’ The
elements to assure safe use must include
one or more goals to mitigate a specific
serious risk listed in the labeling of the
drug. These elements may include the
following requirements:
• Health care providers who prescribe
the drug have particular training or
experience, or are specially certified.
• Pharmacies, practitioners, or health
care settings that dispense the drug are
specially certified.
• The drug is dispensed to patients
only in certain health care settings.
• The drug is dispensed to patients
with evidence of safe use conditions,
such as laboratory test results.
• Each patient using the drug is
subject to certain monitoring.
• Each patient using the drug is
enrolled in a registry.
The elements to assure safe use may
also include an implementation plan,
whereby the applicant monitors,
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evaluates, and works to improve the
implementation of certain of these
elements. FDAAA states that when
elements to assure safe use are required
for a drug that is also marketed in one
or more generic forms, the pioneer drug
and the generic(s) shall use a single,
shared system unless the generic
applicant obtains a waiver in
accordance with statutory criteria. A
waiver may be granted if the burden of
creating a single, shared system
outweighs the benefits of a single,
shared system or if an aspect of the
elements to assure safe use is entitled to
protection as a trade secret or is
protected by a patent for which the
generic applicant has unsuccessfully
sought a license (section 505–1(i)(1) of
the act).
We are mindful of the provisions in
FDAAA that state the elements to assure
safe use must be, among other things,
commensurate with the specific serious
risk listed in the labeling of the drug,
not be unduly burdensome on patient
access to the drug, and be designed to
be compatible with established
distribution, procurement, and
dispensing systems (section 505–1(f)(2)
of the act). Marketed opioid products
include both innovator and generic
drugs. FDAAA requires, with limited
exception, that innovator and generic
drugs use a single, shared system for a
REMS that contains elements to assure
safe use. Putting together a workable
system will involve innovator and
generic sponsors working together to
develop a single, shared system.
II. Scope of Meeting
FDA is holding this public meeting to
allow affected sponsors and other
interested persons to present comments
and information on what a REMS
should look like for these products, how
to minimize the burden on the health
care community and patients while
achieving the objective of ensuring that
the benefits of these drugs continue to
outweigh the risks, and how FDA
should evaluate the REMS to determine
whether it is achieving these objectives.
FDA is interested in obtaining
information and public comment on the
following issues:
A. Elements of the REMS
1. FDA believes that one key element
to assure safe use for these products will
be prescriber certifications to ensure
prescribers are educated about the risks
of these products and proper patient
selection, and the importance of
counseling patients on the safe and
appropriate use of their prescription
medication. Please comment on what
type of education should be provided to
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prescribers and how this certification
should be administered (e.g., through
state Medical Boards, DEA (Drug
Enforcement Agency), other Federal or
state systems, or privately, through a
contractor established to administer the
REMS). Some combination of
administration could also be
considered.
2. FDA believes that another key
element to assure safe use for these
products will be certifications of
pharmacists, prescribers, and other
health care providers or institutions that
dispense or directly administer covered
opioid products to ensure these
representatives of the health care system
also are educated about the risks of
these products and the importance of
counseling patients on the safe and
appropriate use of their prescription
medication. These representatives of the
health care system could be asked to
check that the prescriber has obtained
the certification necessary to prescribe
these products. Please comment on
what type of education should be
provided to pharmacists and other
health care providers who dispense or
directly administer covered products
and how this certification should be
administered (e.g., through state Boards
of Pharmacy, DEA, other Federal or state
systems, or privately, through a
contractor established to administer the
REMS). Some combination of
administration could also be
considered.
3. FDA believes patient education, in
conjunction with a prescriber-patient
agreement, is another key element of the
REMS. What education should be
provided to patients, and should the
system be designed to ensure such
education is provided? For example,
other REMS programs require
prescriber-patient agreements that
patients sign before receiving a
prescription to acknowledge that they
have been advised about the risks and
appropriate use of the products and
received a Medication Guide or other
appropriate patient information. Is such
a system necessary for opioid products?
4. Are other REMS elements necessary
to support the safe use of approved
opioids? A list of possible REMS
elements is provided in section I.D of
this document.
B. System Issues
1. How restrictive a system should be
designed? For example, in some
previously approved risk management
systems, covered drugs are provided
only when prescribers, pharmacists, and
patients are all enrolled in a program
designed to ensure that all understand
the risks and appropriate use of the
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products. Such systems have been put
in place for drugs that are or are
suspected to be teratogenic, and the
programs are designed to ensure
patients are not pregnant and will not
become pregnant while taking the drug.
Such systems create burdens on patients
and the health care system. Is such a
system necessary for opioids? How
would such a program be implemented
given the number of patients,
prescribers, and other health care
providers involved in their use?
2. Should the REMS include controls
on distributors who distribute products
to pharmacies and other health care
providers? What controls are necessary,
and how can they be efficiently
provided without being unduly
burdensome on the health care system?
3. What existing systems (for example,
in pharmacies) already exist that could
be used to implement a REMS? For
example, could patient information be
provided through existing pharmacy
systems to patients? Are there systems
for providing education to prescribers
that could be used to provide the
educational component of a REMS?
4. FDAAA requires that innovator and
generic application holders use a single,
shared system to provide a REMS with
elements to assure safe use. What
obstacles need to be addressed before
such a system could be developed?
5. What metrics should be used to
assess the success of the REMS? Please
comment on the metrics that should be
applied to measure the success of each
of the components of the REMS (e.g.,
educational requirements) as well as
metrics to assess the impact of the
overall REMS on decreasing abuse and
misuse of long acting opioids and
extended release opioids while seeking
to ensure that they remain available for
patients who suffer daily from chronic
pain.
III. Attendance and Registration
Register via email to
OpioidREMS@fda.hhs.gov by providing
complete contact information for each
attendee (including name, title,
affiliation, address, email address, and
phone number(s)) by May 15, 2009.
Registration is free and will be on a firstcome, first-served basis. Early
registration is recommended because
seating is limited. Please send no more
than two individuals from your
organization. Registration on the first
day of the meeting will be provided on
a space available basis beginning at 8
a.m.
If you wish to make an oral
presentation at the meeting, you must
indicate this at the time of registration.
FDA has included questions for
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comment in section II of this document.
You should also identify by number
each question you wish to address in
your presentation. FDA will do its best
to accommodate requests to speak.
Individuals and organizations with
common interests are urged to
consolidate or coordinate their
presentations, and to request time for a
joint presentation. FDA will determine
the amount of time allotted to each
presenter and the approximate time that
each oral presentation is scheduled to
begin. If you need special
accommodations because of disability,
please e-mail OpioidREMS@fda.hhs.gov
at least 7 days before the meeting.
IV. Comments
Regardless of attendance at the public
meeting, interested persons may submit
written or electronic comments to the
Division of Dockets Management (see
ADDRESSES). Submit a single copy of
electronic comments or two paper
copies of any mailed comments, except
that individuals may submit one paper
copy. Comments are to be identified
with the docket number found in
brackets in the heading of this
document. To ensure consideration,
submit comments by June 30, 2009.
Received comments may be seen in the
Division of Dockets Management
between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday
through Friday.
V. Transcripts
Transcripts of the meeting will be
available for review at the Division of
Dockets Management and on the
Internet at https://www.regulations.gov
approximately 30 days after the
meeting. A transcript will also be made
available in either hard copy or on CD–
ROM, upon submission of a Freedom of
Information request. Written requests
are to be sent to Division of Freedom of
Information (HFI–35), Office of
Management Programs, Food and Drug
Administration, 5600 Fishers Lane, rm.
6–30, Rockville, MD 20857.
Dated: April 14, 2009.
Jeffrey Shuren,
Associate Commissioner for Policy and
Planning.
[FR Doc. E9–8992 Filed 4–17–09; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
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National Institutes of Health
Amended Notice
The purpose of this notice is to inform
the public that the National Institutes of
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Health (NIH) is cancelling the May 5,
2009 meeting of the NIH Blue Ribbon
Panel to Advise on the Risk Assessment
of the National Emerging Infectious
Diseases Laboratories at Boston
University Medical Center. The
announcement for the May 5, 2009
meeting was previously published in
the Federal Register on April 3, 2009
(74 FR 15296).
The meeting will be rescheduled and
the new date for the meeting will be
announced and published in the
Federal Register.
Dated: April 14, 2009.
Kelly Fennington,
Special Assistant to the Acting Director,
Office of Science Policy, National Institutes
of Health.
[FR Doc. E9–9037 Filed 4–17–09; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
National Institutes of Health
National Heart, Lung, and Blood
Institute; Notice of Meeting
Pursuant to section 10(d) of the
Federal Advisory Committee Act, as
amended (5 U.S.C. App.), notice is
hereby given of a meeting of the
National Heart, Lung, and Blood
Advisory Council.
The meeting will be open to the
public as indicated below, with
attendance limited to space available.
Individuals who plan to attend and
need special assistance, such as sign
language interpretation or other
reasonable accommodations, should
notify the Contact Person listed below
in advance of the meeting.
The meeting will be closed to the
public in accordance with the
provisions set forth in sections
552b(c)(4) and 552b(c)(6), Title 5 U.S.C.,
as amended. The grant applications and
the discussions could disclose
confidential trade secrets or commercial
property such as patentable material,
and personal information concerning
individuals associated with the grant
applications, the disclosure of which
would constitute a clearly unwarranted
invasion of personal privacy.
Name of Committee: National Heart, Lung,
and Blood Advisory Council.
Date: June 10, 2009.
Open: 8 a.m. to 12 p.m.
Agenda: To discuss program policies and
issues.
Place: National Institutes of Health,
Building 31, 31 Center Drive, C–Wing, Room
10, Bethesda, MD 20892.
Closed: 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.
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[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 74 (Monday, April 20, 2009)]
[Notices]
[Pages 17967-17970]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-8992]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Food and Drug Administration
[Docket No. FDA-2009-N-0143]
Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategies for Certain Opioid
Drugs; Notice of Public Meeting
AGENCY: Food and Drug Administration, HHS.
ACTION: Notice of public meeting; request for comments.
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SUMMARY: The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is announcing a public
meeting to obtain input on developing Risk Evaluation and Mitigation
Strategies (REMS) for certain opioid drugs. The REMS would be intended
to ensure that the benefits of these drugs continue to outweigh certain
risks. The agency has long been concerned about adverse events
associated with this class of drug and has taken steps in cooperation
with drug manufacturers to address these risks. We intend to use the
agency's REMS authority under the Food and Drug Administration
Amendments Act of 2007 (FDAAA) to mitigate the risks of these drugs.
The purpose of the public meeting is to receive information and
comments on this topic.
DATES: The public meeting will be held on May 27 and 28, 2009, from 8
a.m. to 5 p.m. Register to attend the meeting by May 15, 2009. See
section III of this document for information on how to register or make
an oral presentation at the meeting. Written or electronic comments
will be accepted until June 30, 2009.
ADDRESSES: The public meeting will be held at the Hilton Washington, DC
North/Gaithersburg Hotel, 620 Perry Pkwy., Gaithersburg, MD 20877.
Submit written comments to the Division of Dockets Management (HFA-
305), Food and Drug Administration, 5630 Fishers Lane, rm. 1061.
Rockville, MD 20852. Submit electronic comments to https://www.regulations.gov. All comments should be identified with the docket
number found in brackets in the heading of this document. Transcripts
of the meeting will be available for review at the Division of Dockets
Management and on the Internet at https://www.regulations.gov
approximately 30 days after the meeting.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Theresa (Terry) Martin, Center for
Drug Evaluation and Research, Food and Drug Administration, 10903 New
Hampshire Ave., Bldg. 51, rm. 6184, Silver Spring, MD 20993-0002, 301-
796-3448, FAX: 301-847-8752, or Anne Henig, Center for Drug Evaluation
and Research, Food and Drug Administration, 10903 New Hampshire Ave.,
Bldg 51, rm. 6176, Silver Spring, MD 20993-0002, 301-796-3442, FAX:
301-847-8753, email: OpioidREMS@fda.hhs.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
FDAAA (Public Law 110-85) created section 505-1 of the Federal
Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (the act) (21 U.S.C. 355-1). Under section
505-1 of the act,
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FDA may require a REMS when FDA determines that a REMS is necessary to
ensure the benefits of a drug outweigh the risks associated with the
drug. On February 6, 2009, FDA sent letters to manufacturers of certain
opioid drug products, indicating that these drugs will be required to
have a REMS to ensure that the benefits of the drugs continue to
outweigh the risks. An example of the text of these letters is
available on the agency's Web site at https://www.fda.gov/cder/drug/infopage/opioids/meeting_template.pdf. A table of opioid products that
may be required to have REMS is also available on the agency's Web site
at https://www.fda.gov/cder/drug/infopage/opioids/Opioid_Products_chart.htm. Copies of these documents may also be requested from Terry
Martin or Anne Henig (see FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT).
The affected opioid drugs include brand name and generic products
and are formulated with the following active ingredients: Fentanyl,
hydromorphone, methadone, morphine, oxycodone, and oxymorphone. The
REMS would be intended to ensure that the benefits of these drugs
continue to outweigh the risks associated with: (1) Use of high doses
of long acting opioids and extended release opioid products in non-
opioid tolerant and inappropriately selected individuals; (2) abuse;
(3) misuse; and (4) overdose, both accidental and intentional. REMS for
opioids would likely include elements to assure safe use to ensure that
prescribers, dispensers, and patients are aware of and understand the
risks and how these products should be used. The purpose of this
meeting is to examine specific features of REMS for these drugs and
provide interested persons an opportunity to comment. The meeting will
also address issues associated with creating and implementing the REMS
and evaluating its effectiveness.
A. Opioids
Opioid drugs have effects similar or identical to those of opiates
produced naturally in the opium poppy. On the molecular level, they act
at protein sites called opioid receptors, which are found in the brain,
spinal cord, gastrointestinal tract, peripheral nerve terminals, and
other peripheral sites. The actions of these drugs at certain opioid
receptors in the brain, spinal cord, and other sites can effectively
block the transmission of pain messages to the brain. Opioid drugs
currently marketed in the United States for pain relief include
products formulated with active ingredients such as fentanyl,
hydromorphone, methadone, morphine, oxycodone, and oxymorphone.
Individual patients respond differently to different opioid drug
substances, and some patients develop tolerance to the effects of a
particular opioid after chronic exposure. Physicians use a technique
known as ``opioid rotation'' whereby they switch a patient from one
opioid to another if the patient develops tolerance to the drug's
analgesic effects and cannot get adequate pain relief from any single
drug.
Some opioids are naturally long acting; others are incorporated
into extended release formulations. Long acting opioids and extended
release opioid formulations are often useful for the management of
persistent, moderate to severe pain in patients requiring continuous,
around-the-clock pain relief for an extended period of time. Long
acting products allow these patients to have their pain controlled for
long periods of time without the need for another dose and to
significantly reduce the number of tablets the patient must take each
day. Therefore, having long acting opioids and extended release opioid
formulations available provides important pain relief options for
patients who require management of persistent, moderate to severe pain.
The expected duration of treatment with long acting opioids and
extended release opioid formulations ranges from a few weeks to months
or longer. In some cases, moderate to severe pain requiring continuous,
around-the-clock opioid therapy is associated with a serious condition
that is unlikely to improve.
These types of opioids are widely prescribed, posing challenges for
the development of REMS for these products. Long acting and extended
release opioid formulations were used by nearly 4 million patients in
the United States in 2007. Physicians who prescribe and administer long
acting and extended release opioid drugs practice in a wide variety of
areas including family practice, anesthesiology, internal medicine,
orthopedic surgery, physiatry, neurology, rheumatology, oncology, and
other areas. A REMS, to adequately manage the risks of these products
without unduly burdening the health care system or reducing patient
access to these medications, must be carefully designed.
B. Adverse Events Associated With Opioids
The most serious of the known adverse events associated with opioid
pain relievers are: Respiratory depression, central nervous system
depression, addiction, and death. Adverse events are associated with
improper dosing, indication, and patient selection, as well as with
abuse and addiction. For example, some products and doses are indicated
only for the management of persistent moderate to severe pain in
patients who have demonstrated opioid tolerance. Use of these products
in non-opioid-tolerant patients may result in fatal respiratory
depression. In other cases, when extended release products are
intentionally crushed or dissolved, the controlled-release mechanism
may be defeated, allowing a large dose to be taken at once. This
presents a risk of fatal overdose, particularly in individuals who are
not tolerant to opioids.
C. Efforts to Address the Risks of Opioid Use
FDA and drug manufacturers have taken steps to decrease abuse and
misuse of long acting opioids and extended release opioids while
seeking to ensure that they remain available for patients who suffer
daily from chronic pain. Since 2001, FDA has required boxed warnings,
the agency's strongest warning, on the labeling of long acting opioid
drugs to educate physicians and patients on the risks and proper uses
of these products. The agency has also required risk management plans
for many of these products. These plans have incorporated educational
programs for prescribers, pharmacists, and patients, and surveillance
systems to monitor for signals of increasing abuse, misuse, and
diversion, as well as plans for intervention when these signals are
noted. In addition, drug manufacturers have sought to incorporate
features into their products intended to deter abuse. For example, the
active ingredient may be incorporated into a matrix from which it
cannot easily be extracted or that is not easily ground into powder. In
other cases, an opioid antagonist is sequestered in the inner core of
an extended release tablet, designed to be released if the tablet is
crushed or dissolved.
D. REMS for Long Acting and Extended Release Opioids
Despite existing efforts to address the risks associated with
opioid drugs, misuse and abuse are increasing. Data from multiple
sources, including the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and the
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA),
indicate increasing misuse and abuse of prescription opioid analgesic
medications over the past decade. For example, SAMHSA's National Survey
on Drug Use and Health estimates that
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11 million Americans over the age of 12, or 4.7 percent of that
population, took pain relievers for nonmedical use in 2002. That number
increased to 12.5 million, or 5.0 percent of the population over 12, in
2007. Likewise, data compiled by SAMHSA show a significant increase
from 2000 to 2006 in admissions to substance abuse treatment services
for individuals abusing opioid analgesics. Much of this misuse has
involved the extended release opioid analgesics and methadone. To
address this public health problem, the agency has indicated it will
require REMS for certain opioid products.
Section 505-1 of the act authorizes FDA to require persons
submitting certain drug approval applications to submit a proposed REMS
as part of the application. FDA may require a REMS when FDA determines
that a REMS is necessary to ensure the benefits of the drug outweigh
the risks associated with the drug. Section 505-1 of the act also
authorizes FDA to require holders of certain drug applications approved
without a REMS to submit a proposed REMS if the agency becomes aware of
new safety information and makes a determination that a REMS is
necessary to ensure the benefits of the drug outweigh the risks. Once
FDA notifies the holder of an approved covered application that a REMS
is necessary, the holder must submit a proposed REMS within 120 days,
or within such other reasonable time as FDA requires.
Every REMS must include a timetable for the submission of
assessments of the REMS. A REMS may also include a Medication Guide (as
provided in 21 CFR part 208), a patient package insert, a communication
plan, and certain ``elements to assure safe use.'' The elements to
assure safe use must include one or more goals to mitigate a specific
serious risk listed in the labeling of the drug. These elements may
include the following requirements:
Health care providers who prescribe the drug have
particular training or experience, or are specially certified.
Pharmacies, practitioners, or health care settings that
dispense the drug are specially certified.
The drug is dispensed to patients only in certain health
care settings.
The drug is dispensed to patients with evidence of safe
use conditions, such as laboratory test results.
Each patient using the drug is subject to certain
monitoring.
Each patient using the drug is enrolled in a registry.
The elements to assure safe use may also include an implementation
plan, whereby the applicant monitors, evaluates, and works to improve
the implementation of certain of these elements. FDAAA states that when
elements to assure safe use are required for a drug that is also
marketed in one or more generic forms, the pioneer drug and the
generic(s) shall use a single, shared system unless the generic
applicant obtains a waiver in accordance with statutory criteria. A
waiver may be granted if the burden of creating a single, shared system
outweighs the benefits of a single, shared system or if an aspect of
the elements to assure safe use is entitled to protection as a trade
secret or is protected by a patent for which the generic applicant has
unsuccessfully sought a license (section 505-1(i)(1) of the act).
We are mindful of the provisions in FDAAA that state the elements
to assure safe use must be, among other things, commensurate with the
specific serious risk listed in the labeling of the drug, not be unduly
burdensome on patient access to the drug, and be designed to be
compatible with established distribution, procurement, and dispensing
systems (section 505-1(f)(2) of the act). Marketed opioid products
include both innovator and generic drugs. FDAAA requires, with limited
exception, that innovator and generic drugs use a single, shared system
for a REMS that contains elements to assure safe use. Putting together
a workable system will involve innovator and generic sponsors working
together to develop a single, shared system.
II. Scope of Meeting
FDA is holding this public meeting to allow affected sponsors and
other interested persons to present comments and information on what a
REMS should look like for these products, how to minimize the burden on
the health care community and patients while achieving the objective of
ensuring that the benefits of these drugs continue to outweigh the
risks, and how FDA should evaluate the REMS to determine whether it is
achieving these objectives.
FDA is interested in obtaining information and public comment on
the following issues:
A. Elements of the REMS
1. FDA believes that one key element to assure safe use for these
products will be prescriber certifications to ensure prescribers are
educated about the risks of these products and proper patient
selection, and the importance of counseling patients on the safe and
appropriate use of their prescription medication. Please comment on
what type of education should be provided to prescribers and how this
certification should be administered (e.g., through state Medical
Boards, DEA (Drug Enforcement Agency), other Federal or state systems,
or privately, through a contractor established to administer the REMS).
Some combination of administration could also be considered.
2. FDA believes that another key element to assure safe use for
these products will be certifications of pharmacists, prescribers, and
other health care providers or institutions that dispense or directly
administer covered opioid products to ensure these representatives of
the health care system also are educated about the risks of these
products and the importance of counseling patients on the safe and
appropriate use of their prescription medication. These representatives
of the health care system could be asked to check that the prescriber
has obtained the certification necessary to prescribe these products.
Please comment on what type of education should be provided to
pharmacists and other health care providers who dispense or directly
administer covered products and how this certification should be
administered (e.g., through state Boards of Pharmacy, DEA, other
Federal or state systems, or privately, through a contractor
established to administer the REMS). Some combination of administration
could also be considered.
3. FDA believes patient education, in conjunction with a
prescriber-patient agreement, is another key element of the REMS. What
education should be provided to patients, and should the system be
designed to ensure such education is provided? For example, other REMS
programs require prescriber-patient agreements that patients sign
before receiving a prescription to acknowledge that they have been
advised about the risks and appropriate use of the products and
received a Medication Guide or other appropriate patient information.
Is such a system necessary for opioid products?
4. Are other REMS elements necessary to support the safe use of
approved opioids? A list of possible REMS elements is provided in
section I.D of this document.
B. System Issues
1. How restrictive a system should be designed? For example, in
some previously approved risk management systems, covered drugs are
provided only when prescribers, pharmacists, and patients are all
enrolled in a program designed to ensure that all understand the risks
and appropriate use of the
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products. Such systems have been put in place for drugs that are or are
suspected to be teratogenic, and the programs are designed to ensure
patients are not pregnant and will not become pregnant while taking the
drug. Such systems create burdens on patients and the health care
system. Is such a system necessary for opioids? How would such a
program be implemented given the number of patients, prescribers, and
other health care providers involved in their use?
2. Should the REMS include controls on distributors who distribute
products to pharmacies and other health care providers? What controls
are necessary, and how can they be efficiently provided without being
unduly burdensome on the health care system?
3. What existing systems (for example, in pharmacies) already exist
that could be used to implement a REMS? For example, could patient
information be provided through existing pharmacy systems to patients?
Are there systems for providing education to prescribers that could be
used to provide the educational component of a REMS?
4. FDAAA requires that innovator and generic application holders
use a single, shared system to provide a REMS with elements to assure
safe use. What obstacles need to be addressed before such a system
could be developed?
5. What metrics should be used to assess the success of the REMS?
Please comment on the metrics that should be applied to measure the
success of each of the components of the REMS (e.g., educational
requirements) as well as metrics to assess the impact of the overall
REMS on decreasing abuse and misuse of long acting opioids and extended
release opioids while seeking to ensure that they remain available for
patients who suffer daily from chronic pain.
III. Attendance and Registration
Register via email to OpioidREMS@fda.hhs.gov by providing complete
contact information for each attendee (including name, title,
affiliation, address, email address, and phone number(s)) by May 15,
2009. Registration is free and will be on a first-come, first-served
basis. Early registration is recommended because seating is limited.
Please send no more than two individuals from your organization.
Registration on the first day of the meeting will be provided on a
space available basis beginning at 8 a.m.
If you wish to make an oral presentation at the meeting, you must
indicate this at the time of registration. FDA has included questions
for comment in section II of this document. You should also identify by
number each question you wish to address in your presentation. FDA will
do its best to accommodate requests to speak. Individuals and
organizations with common interests are urged to consolidate or
coordinate their presentations, and to request time for a joint
presentation. FDA will determine the amount of time allotted to each
presenter and the approximate time that each oral presentation is
scheduled to begin. If you need special accommodations because of
disability, please e-mail OpioidREMS@fda.hhs.gov at least 7 days before
the meeting.
IV. Comments
Regardless of attendance at the public meeting, interested persons
may submit written or electronic comments to the Division of Dockets
Management (see ADDRESSES). Submit a single copy of electronic comments
or two paper copies of any mailed comments, except that individuals may
submit one paper copy. Comments are to be identified with the docket
number found in brackets in the heading of this document. To ensure
consideration, submit comments by June 30, 2009. Received comments may
be seen in the Division of Dockets Management between 9 a.m. and 4
p.m., Monday through Friday.
V. Transcripts
Transcripts of the meeting will be available for review at the
Division of Dockets Management and on the Internet at https://www.regulations.gov approximately 30 days after the meeting. A
transcript will also be made available in either hard copy or on CD-
ROM, upon submission of a Freedom of Information request. Written
requests are to be sent to Division of Freedom of Information (HFI-35),
Office of Management Programs, Food and Drug Administration, 5600
Fishers Lane, rm. 6-30, Rockville, MD 20857.
Dated: April 14, 2009.
Jeffrey Shuren,
Associate Commissioner for Policy and Planning.
[FR Doc. E9-8992 Filed 4-17-09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160-01-S