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Teva Pharmaceuticals Plans To Market Hydrocodone; Abuse Experts Worried

Hydrocodone

By CHRIS HAWLEY   01/12/12 05:49 PM ET  AP

NEW YORK -- A second drug company has confirmed it plans to market a new form of the powerful and addictive painkiller hydrocodone, worrying experts who fear a narcotics "arms race" that could worsen a national problem with prescription drug abuse.

Israel-based Teva Pharmaceuticals says its product, TD Hydrocodone, could be worth as much as $500 million annually in sales. The drug is in the final stages of testing, but the company has not yet applied for Food and Drug Administration approval.

Four companies have been working to develop pure forms of hydrocodone, the main ingredient in Vicodin, Lortab and other painkillers. They have been mostly quiet about their plans.

But William Marth, chief executive of the company's North Wales, Pa.-based North American division, gave a preview of TD Hydrocodone during an investors' conference in San Francisco on Tuesday.

"We believe that's another product that will get approved and can be a three-, four-, $500-million product in a couple of years," Marth said.

He said the drug could be on the market in the "relatively near future," adding it should replace revenue lost when the patent on another Teva drug, the multiple sclerosis treatment Copaxone, expires in 2014.

A recording of the speech was posted on the company's website on Thursday.

Teva did not respond to requests for more information. But documents filed with the National Institutes of Health show the company has been testing 12-hour, extended-release pills containing up to 45 milligrams of pure hydrocodone.

Existing medicines like Vicodin, which are not extended-release, contain no more than 10 milligrams of hydrocodone mixed with a non-addictive painkiller like acetaminophen or ibuprofen.

Another company, San Diego-based Zogenix, plans to file an application early this year for another pure hydrocodone product, Zohydro.

Purdue Pharma, the Stamford, Conn.-based maker of OxyContin, and Denmark-based Egalet are also working on hydrocodone pills, according to documents they have filed with the U.S. government.

Hydrocodone, oxycodone and morphine fall into a category of painkillers known as opiates because they are chemically similar to opium. They are extremely powerful and can create a physical dependence. Users who try to stop can suffer intense withdrawal symptoms, from muddled thinking to stomach cramps, heart palpitations and nausea.

Experts in pain management say opiates are needed for legitimate pain control, especially as the U.S. population gets older. Analysts say the market is worth billions of dollars.

But critics fear the new hydrocodone drugs could unleash a new wave of abuse like the one that accompanied the debut of OxyContin in the 1990s.

"It's a prescription opiate arms race," said Gregory Bunt, medical director of the Daytop Village chain of drug treatment centers in New York. "As the companies all compete they promote it to the various doctors, and it leads to an increase in prescriptions and makes more of those super-potent painkillers available for abuse."

On Sunday, New York Sen. Charles Schumer sent a letter to the FDA warning against the approval of new hydrocodone products.

"I urge your agency to proceed with great caution before allowing these powerful narcotics to enter the market," Schumer wrote.

New York Attorney General Eric T. Schneiderman issued a report Wednesday on the state's "alarming" problem with prescription drug abuse. Oxycodone prescriptions have increased 82 percent and hydrocodone prescriptions by 16.7 percent between 2007 and 2010, the report said.

The TD in TD Hydrocodone stands for tamper deterrent, said Judson Clark, an analyst with the Edward Jones investment company who follows Teva. Addicts crush extended-release opiate pills to get the full impact of the medication and increase the high, so drug companies have been trying to develop tamper-resistant technologies to combat abuse.

Purdue Pharma has introduced a new form of OxyContin that "smooshes" instead of crumbling. Other companies are experimenting with chemical combinations or even encasing medicines in hard plastic pills that slowly leak out doses as they move through the digestive tract.

Zogenix says none of these methods is completely tamper-proof. Its Zohydro contains no tamper-resistant technologies.

Teva has not disclosed what tamper-resistant method it is using.

Clark said Teva's $500 million-a-year sales goal for TD Hydrocodone is likely within reach. That's about half the annual sales of a blockbuster drug like Viagra.

The drug should be quickly profitable because hydrocodone is already a proven painkiller, he said.

"You're not going to have to have the sales force that you would need for a new drug that you're taking to market that no one has heard of and, quite frankly, no one knows they need," Clark said. "So in that sense, it will more or less sell itself."

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NEW YORK -- A second drug company has confirmed it plans to market a new form of the powerful and addictive painkiller hydrocodone, worrying experts who fear a narcotics "arms race" that could worsen ...
NEW YORK -- A second drug company has confirmed it plans to market a new form of the powerful and addictive painkiller hydrocodone, worrying experts who fear a narcotics "arms race" that could worsen ...
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04:50 PM on 05/26/2012
Have you tried Pot ? Go to NORML.com
11:28 AM on 01/17/2012
Lortab 10/500 is comprised of Acetaminophen and Hydrocodone and it comes under group of drugs called narcotic pain relievers. The component Acetaminophen is not as strong as Hydrocodone but it greatly helps in augmenting the outcome of Hydrocodone in the body. When both Hydro/APAP (Hydrocodone/APAP) are combined together they speedily act as fast of moderate and severe pain relievers. Findrxonline.com mentions that they are not only used for pain relief purpose but are also useful for other kinds of ways.
01:12 PM on 01/13/2012
i really dont understand the government allowing this. heroin was also a good pain killer but it was found to be very addictive just like these drugs. why not make them illegal just like heroin. there are plenty of other pain killers out there that are much safer.
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Rainiermec
www.current.com/countdown
03:11 AM on 01/17/2012
Name one. Opiates are the one drug that works. Uniformed people such as yourself and your ridiculous comment make life very miserable for many people. It has been proven many times opiates work, Opiates work where other options do not. Doctors are simply afraid to write prescriptions for opiates, even where there is intractable pain. Should the government just make all things addictive illegal? Alcohol causes so much more societal damage, why not jump on a soapbox to ban that? I fell from a building 10 years ago and broke many vertebrae and bones that I am held together by screws and rods. Opiates allow me to interact with my family, not one other drug does that. Without I cannot get out of bed. After a short period of time I do not get any sort of high, simply pain relief. Many cancer patients pain can only be controlled by opiates, should they just suffer because people such as yourself want to make them illegal because a few abuse them? Oxycodone and Hydrocodone both come in an abuse proof pill, they are hittting the market now. Everything in life gets abused by somebody. Just making it illegal is not the answer. I hope you never experience pain that ruins your life and the only medication that helps is under attack because it is abused a few. You do not understand pain or you would not make comments of ignorance such as this. Read some material on pain management, then post.
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Tim Day
Am I waiting to Live or Waiting to Die.....
11:36 AM on 03/01/2012
I'm in the same boat...Pain Dr. even told me once that Tramadol and Neurontin will work better than an opiate...I said ok, then start using it immediately following surgey on everyone, he stuttered and then left the room
04:44 PM on 05/26/2012
If it were illegal I would be braking the law and it would be more expensive plus harder to get
12:52 PM on 01/13/2012
Opioid painkillers are a very important part of pain control for people in many kinds of pain. In many ways they are safer than common over the counter drugs like ibuprofen or naproxen sodium. The fact that some people take these drugs to "get high" is no reason to restrict them. They are far less harmful than smoking or heavy alcohol use. Many of the dangers are associated with excessive intake of acetaminophen which is a major cause of liver failure, especially when combined with alcohol. These companies are developing products that do not contain acetaminophen, which is a good thing, making them considerably less risky compared to existing FDA approved hydrocodone products. The anti-drug fanatics should not have a say in drug policy because they are out of touch with reality. Nobody should be punished with severe liver damage for their drug use, which is the main reason acetaminophen is in existing products. It is really a sad situation.
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Rainiermec
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03:24 AM on 01/17/2012
Great post. Many with no clue of pain management love to stand on soap boxes. Opiates are an important tool in the pain management toolbox. People such as myself who are long time users of Opiates do not experience the "high" so many people assume we get. You simply get pain relief in a manner which is much less toxic on your body. I have seen many people who live with severe pain because a doctor does not have the courage to write a script for the best method of treatment. Pain control is very misunderstood in this country, no one should suffer when there is a simple safe medicine they can use, that others in society have decided they should suffer, due to pure ignorance. Yes abuse happens, but making others suffer is not the answer.
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Boobuzuela
Satire identical to actual Republican positions
11:30 AM on 01/13/2012
There's no therapeutic value in pain. I took Vicodin for a broken arm. When the pain was gone it took me 2-3 days to taper off the medicine, without feeling anxious. People who don't have an addictive personality aren't going to get "hooked" from proper use of painkillers. The DEA needs to lighten up on painkillers, and go deal with Meth and other drugs that cause REAL problems in society.
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Raven1970
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11:47 AM on 01/13/2012
I assure you when 40% of the population end up addicted just as much as any heroine addict and suddenly they can't get them anymore you will have a different attitude....Vicodin's nothing in the arsenal of drugs they are unleashing on us...it is mostly aceteminophin which is non-addictive, they are working on drugs that are pure opiates to replace drugs like Vicodin on the foundation that aceteminophin causes liver damage.
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11:24 AM on 01/13/2012
While I understand the concerns of those who treat addicts, I think they need to walk a mile in the shoes of someone in chronic pain. Doctors are terrified that they will be investigated even if they are prescribing well within normal amounts for people who are suffering daily. This country has a huge problem with chronic under-medicating for pain, and these crusaders are part of the problem. The truth is, most people can find many different substances to become addicted to, and taking away medications from those who can't function without them is not the answer.
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Raven1970
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11:36 AM on 01/13/2012
"This country has has a huge problem with chronic under-medicating for pain"?!?

We use over 80% of the WORLD'S SUPPLY of oxycodone in this country, what did we do before the 1990's when oxycodone was released in the market? I never even heard of the terms "Chronic Pain" or "Pain Management" back then, now they are everyday terms with people in their 30's and 40's...open your eyes and see what's going on here...we are a drug nation.
12:15 PM on 01/13/2012
Under-medicating? where do you live? withdraw from many painkillers is more painful then the original pain. Painkiller abuse is an epidemic that most addicts think because the doctor prescibes them they can't be bad. Big pharma would like you to be hooked. Imagine if you could create a product the people would get addicted to, lets say like cigarettes or alcohol. Looks like a gold mine to me.
11:19 AM on 01/13/2012
Of course more pain medicine is being used..... the population is getting older, and health issues require pain treatment. Why suffer??
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Raven1970
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11:40 AM on 01/13/2012
The population is getting older.....you would think that humans did not exist before this "population" started getting older. Whatever did they do before oxycodone/hydrocodone...
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Rainiermec
www.current.com/countdown
03:49 AM on 01/17/2012
I guess older people should live with bad knees, arthitis, and many other ailments simply because you would like use to forget about technology and go back 200 years. They lived in severe pain before to answer your question.
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mater
mater
11:07 AM on 01/13/2012
The NEXT BULLET IN THE LOADED GUNS OF THE DRUG WARS!