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Vicodin: Feds Lower Painkiller Dose In Vicodin, Percocet

MATTHEW PERRONE   01/13/11 05:48 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — Federal health regulators are limiting a key ingredient found in Vicodin, Percocet and other prescription painkillers that have been linked to thousands of cases of liver damage each year.

The Food and Drug Administration said Thursday it will cap the amount of acetaminophen in the drugs at 325 milligrams per capsule. Current products on the market contain doses of up to 700 milligrams.

Acetaminophen is a ubiquitous pain reliever found in Tylenol, Nyquil and thousands of other medicines used to treat headaches, fever and sore throats. The ingredient is also used at larger doses in prescription combination drugs that mix it with narcotic drugs like oxycodone.

Those products are not dangerous by themselves but can cause toxic overdoses when patients combine them with a second acetaminophen-containing drug like Tylenol.

FDA officials said the labeling on prescription drugs often does not make it clear that they contain acetaminophen, instead using abbreviations for the ingredient like 'APAP.'

"One of the real challenges we have is that patients taking these products don't know they're taking acetaminophen at all," said FDA deputy director for new drugs, Dr. Sandra Kweder, in a telephone briefing with reporters. "They don't realize that they are overdosing."

The FDA said it is working with pharmacies and other medical groups to develop standard labeling for acetaminophen, though that is not part of Thursday's action.

Agency officials said the drugs will still be effective at lower doses.

"The amount of acetaminophen in these products has gradually crept up over the years," Kweder said. "If you look at these products 20 to 30 years ago, many did not contain high doses of acetaminophen."

The restrictions announced Thursday will not affect over-the-counter products like Tylenol and Theraflu. The FDA said it is still considering limits on those products, which involves a more complicated rule-making process than prescription products. For now, over-the-counter products will actually be permitted to contain higher doses of the drug – up to 500 milligrams per pill or capsule.

Acetaminophen is the leading cause of liver failure in the U.S. and sends 56,000 people to the emergency room annually. About 200 of them die, and the FDA estimates 120 of those deaths are linked to prescription drugs with acetaminophen.

The FDA said it would add a boxed warning, the strongest type, to all prescription drugs containing acetaminophen.

Vicodin is marketed by Abbott Laboratories, while Percocet is marketed by Endo Pharmaceuticals. Vicodin combines acetaminophen with hydrocodone, while Percocet contains oxycodone. Both formulas also are available in cheaper generic versions. U.S. sales of all drugs in the group topped $6 billion in 2009, according to health industry data firm IMS Health.

"Acetaminophen is a bit like salt, in that it works so well that people put it in almost everything," said Erik Gordon, a professor at the University of Michigan's Ross School of Business who follows the pharmaceutical industry. "But it has the same downside in that at the end of day you have no idea how much is in your system."

The maximum dose of the ingredient under FDA safety guidelines is 4,000 milligrams per 24-hour period.

The FDA restrictions come more than a year and a half after a high-profile meeting where a panel of 37 expert physicians narrowly voted to eliminate drugs like Vicodin completely.

Regulators said they decided against that action because of the widespread use of the drugs, which were prescribed roughly 200 million times last year, according to the FDA.

"We thought this was a more reasoned and reasonable action to take," Kweder said.

The FDA is not required to follow the panel's advice, though it often does. The same panel recommended lowering the dose of acetaminophen found in over-the-counter products.

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06:41 PM on 02/01/2011
A small correction to the above: Current products on the market contain doses of up to 750mg, not 700.

I applaud this. Acetaminophen (tylenol) poisoning via overdose or repeated high doses on a regular basis is one of the most common drug-related causes of death in this country.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dbrett480
07:32 PM on 01/20/2011
Good idea. But you would think people would be smart enough to know not to combine other pharmaceutics with painkillers.
06:48 PM on 02/01/2011
The trouble is, it's not just people mixing medications.

For instance, if an individual is given a common preparation of hydrocodone, brand name vicodin, containing 7.5mg of hydrocodone (the opioid analgesic) and 750 mg of acetaminophen following a surgery or injury and advised to take one or two every four to six hours "as needed," they could very well end up taking six pills per day without exceeding their doctor's recommendation. 6 x 750 adds up, and the patient is taking 4.5 grams of acetaminophen per day, above the recommended daily maximum, and enough to cause liver-related issues in some individuals.

The real problem is that hydrocodone in tablet form in this country is required to contain acetaminophen, supposedly to deter abuse (although it is a good adjunct to a narcotic for pain management that requires one.) The problem with that logic is that 1.) most of the people abusing these pills have no idea that there's an upper limit for acetaminophen, or any idea, for that matter, of what's even in these pills and 2.) that some patients with chronic pain issues use hydrocodone on a daily basis in higher doses than one would need post injury or minor surgery, and since it's only available in preparation with acetaminophen, they're forced to take higher doses than would be optimal in order to control their pain levels.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Winston Smith
GOP solution: GIVE THE 1% MORE !!!
02:05 PM on 01/18/2011
Why not let the free market regulate this kind of thing ?

Surely the proper dose would have been determined if the government had not set it in the first place.

*sn@rk*
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fudgefase
Boldly going nowhere...
01:34 PM on 01/18/2011
In the UK, the traditional does for paracetamol, as it's known over here, is 500mg, in both prescription and OTC medicines. The trouble comes when people mix medicines - cold cures contain it and when taken with some 'ordinary' painkiller, an accidental overdose can occur. Meds over here are well marked 'do not take with any other paracetamol containing medicine' but people don't seem to read instructions or pay attention to warnings. Perhaps the ideal solution would be to offer other alternatives for people to buy. Surely there are other things that work as well?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Camarosc35
George
10:51 AM on 01/17/2011
These painkillers are also used legitimately by millions of Americans; the FDA is doing the right thing by limiting the amount of acetaminophen these contain. It is a perverse and contradictory disincentive to discourage potential abuse by causing liver failure.
09:46 AM on 01/15/2011
There is a sad back story about pharmacy practices in regard to marketing products. http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/10/business/11drug-web.html Prescription drug abuse is I believe the leading cause of of addiction at this time. Sad.
04:17 PM on 01/14/2011
Taking out the ingredients like acetaminophen will actually make them easier to abuse, and we shouldn't we just stop making these painkillers all together?? They cause more pain and suffering than they prevent through addiction...too bad there isn't a 100% natural painkiller that you cannot be physically addicted to that also grows in almost every climate on earth (i.e. marijuana)
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Fretslayer
I don't waste my time reading replies from NeoCons
09:23 AM on 01/15/2011
Marijuana does not take away the pain from my crushed vertebra.
It distracts me.

Pain killers block that pain and allow me to live a life as normal as the person next to me.
Before you suggest banning all of them, perhaps you should should spend some time around people dealing with chronic pain for the rest of their lives. You might be surprised at what you learn.
01:37 AM on 01/16/2011
I am guessing you have never suffered with chronic pain.
07:29 AM on 01/14/2011
Great!!! People always like getting less for their money!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
marijam
Independent
06:49 AM on 01/14/2011
Beware of taking any drug that came on the market after the year 2000. Drugs are not tested in this country any more and the countries they are tested in are not under the jurisdiction of our FDA.

I cannot take Motrin any more. It gives me a weird nervous reaction that scares the heck out of me.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Savage Saint Roger
Card Carrying Liberal
06:07 AM on 01/14/2011
Marijuana can be the key to pain control without trashing the whole body as do narcotics. Marijuana also has other key medical recovery points with tumor reductions for over the last 30 years in canada being only one of them. Marijuana can be the Ace in the hole for America when it finally gets its self righteous head out of its bottom.
And no America, the marijuana pills do not work properly! Pharma bleeds the goodness out of it!
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Lesann
The secret is negative reinforcement
12:43 PM on 01/18/2011
It can, however, it has not been successful with my patients who have chronic pain. This is especially true with chronic back pain.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Winston Smith
GOP solution: GIVE THE 1% MORE !!!
02:16 PM on 01/18/2011
Actually... Marijuana pills made from the WHOLE plant work great. YAK makes some excellent ones.

It is big pharma's needlessly over processed marijuana derivative "Marinol" that is next to worthless.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bccmeteorites
Don't believe everything NASA says.
05:06 AM on 01/14/2011
They really want us to feel the pain.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
aspiecelia
03:14 AM on 01/14/2011
Once people are addicted to the narcotics and start taking more than is prescribed they destroy their livers with the acetaminiphen. If the pain pills are just the narcotic, the doctor can tell them they can take a tylenol with the narcotic to increase pain relief. That stops the chronic damage to liver that has caused so many liver transplants. People can recover from addiction, but liver damage does not heal.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
myth buster
12:38 AM on 01/16/2011
I agree, cocktails are dangerous, far more dangerous than individual drugs.
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Stalling
Holy Money
03:12 PM on 01/16/2011
I thought kidneys didn't heal but livers did?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AndyWright68
Freedom is inevitable!
02:30 AM on 01/14/2011
The FDA should be abolished. In fact, the people running it should be charged with murder for all the lifesaving drugs they have denied the terminally ill.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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01:24 AM on 01/14/2011
tell Gov to stay away from my Vicodin LOL
12:52 AM on 01/14/2011
It tells you one thing, there are probablly too many people on the pain killer and what will eventually happen that the will trat restricting the use of typical medications. Narcotics have been given a bad rap by government and the medical profession and the people who really need the drugs are not getting them in reasonable therapeaptic quantities because ofall the people who abuse prescription pain killers.