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Public Citizen Sues FDA for Failure to Act on Dangerous Drug

June 19, 2008

Public Citizen Sues FDA for Failure to Act on Dangerous Drug

Propoxyphene (Darvon) Has Hazardous Side Effects And Is No More Effective Than Similar Drugs

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Public Citizen sued the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) today for failing to act on its petition to withdraw Darvon, Darvocet and all drugs containing propoxyphene gradually from the market as has now been required in the United Kingdom (U.K.).

Public Citizen’s complaint, filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, argues that the FDA is violating the law by not acting on Public Citizen’s Feb. 28, 2006, petition. By not acting, the FDA is allowing drugs containing propoxyphene to remain on the market, putting patients at risk.

Propoxyphene is physically and psychologically addictive, is no more effective than safer alternatives and has been associated with more than 2,000 accidental deaths in America since 1981, Public Citizen told the FDA in its 2006 petition. Despite the drug’s health risks, however, it was one of the 25 most prescribed generic drugs last year, with 22 million prescriptions filled in pharmacies in 2007.

According to Dr. Sidney Wolfe, director of the Health Research Group at Public Citizen, “Top FDA drug officials, including Center for Drug Evaluation and Research Director Dr. Janet Woodcock and Dr. Robert Temple, are well aware that this drug has considerable human toxicity, addiction potential and abuse liability, but very limited therapeutic usefulness. Given this extremely unfavorable ratio of risks to benefits, it is inexcusable that the FDA did not take propoxyphene off the market long ago. It is our hope that this lawsuit will force the agency to finally begin this desperately needed regulatory process.”

The U.K. began a phased withdrawal of Darvocet from the British market in 2005, following the recommendation of the U.K. Committee on Safety of Medicines (CSM). In its report, the CSM stated that it could not “identify any patient group in whom the risk-benefit [ratio] may be positive.” The withdrawal was completed at the end of 2007.

However, three years after the British government began its action to withdraw the drug, and two years after Public Citizen petitioned for its phasing out, the FDA still has not done anything to protect Americans from propoxyphene’s dangerous side effects.

A large proportion of the deaths from propoxyphene occurred because most of the drug is converted into a metabolite that is highly toxic to the heart, lasts longer in the body than the original compound and results in cardiac depression. Adverse cardiac events associated with propoxyphene include an interruption of heart transmission of electrical impulses, slowed heartbeats and a decreased ability of the heart to contract properly.

Propoxyphene-acetaminophen, or Darvocet, is more dangerous than acetaminophen (theingredient in Tylenol) alone, yet a study has indicated that Darvocet is no more effective in treating post-operative pain than acetaminophen. Reports on propoxyphene dosage suggest addiction can occur at less than the maximum recommended daily dose and unequivocally confirm addiction at just twice the recommended daily dose.

In addition, propoxyphene has been deemed inappropriate for the elderly because of its adverse effects on the central nervous system – such as sedation and confusion – that have been found to increase the likelihood of falls and fall-related fractures. Studies have shown that propoxyphene use is widespread in emergency rooms, institutionalized populations and retirement communities.

Public Citizen is asking the court to find that the FDA’s delay in ruling on the 2006 petition is unlawful and to order the FDA to issue a decision on the petition.

Public Citizen publishes Worst Pills, Best Pills, a monthly newsletter available in print and electronic formats through Public Citizen’s Web site, www.WorstPills.org. This site has other searchable information about the uses, risks and adverse effects associated with prescription medications, including all the information contained in Public Citizen’s best-selling book, “Worst Pills, Best Pills,” which has listed propoxyphene as a DO NOT USE drug since its first edition in 1988. Public Citizen has a strong track record of identifying dangerous drugs well before federal regulators take action to ban or put warnings on these drugs. For example, Public Citizen warned consumers about the dangers of Vioxx, ephedra, Bextra, Rezulin, Baycol, Propulsid and many other drugs years before the drugs were pulled from the market. 

READ the complaint.