Story Published:
Jan 24, 2006 at 10:43 AM PST
Story Updated:
Aug 31, 2006 at 1:11 AM PST
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Certain types of nonprescription inhalers used
for decades by asthma sufferers, often against the advice of
doctors, could be taken off drugstore shelves because they contain
propellants that harm the ozone layer.
An advisory panel voted 11-7 Tuesday to recommend that the Food
and Drug Administration ban Primatene Mist and similar
nonprescription inhalers, said Fran Sullivan, a spokesman for
Primatene manufacturer Wyeth Consumer Healthcare. The agency
usually follows the advice of its outside panels of experts though
a decision can take months.
Wyeth estimates that 3 million Americans use Primatene Mist for
mild or intermittent cases of asthma, Sullivan said. About
two-thirds also use a prescription inhaler but rely on Primatene as
a backup. Another 700,000 use the inhalers because they don't have
a prescription or lack health insurance, he said.
The company is the biggest maker of epinephrine inhalers, with
$43 million in sales last year. The drug opens air passages to the
lungs to relieve temporarily wheezing, shortness of breath and
troubled breathing, according to the FDA.
The over-the-counter inhalers proposed to be banned contain the
drug epinephrine along with chlorofluorocarbons, or CFCs, which
propel the medicine into the lungs of asthmatics.
CFCs were long used as aerosol propellants in a variety of
products but are being phased out because they harm the Earth's
protective ozone layer. In March, the FDA said inhalers using CFCs
to dispense the prescription drug albuterol would be banned at the
end of 2008.
On Tuesday, Wyeth asked that the FDA stay any such ban on
Primatene Mist until it is ready to market an approved CFC-free
version, said its representative, Dr. Sumon Wason. Wyeth hopes to
have such an inhaler ready for sale in 2009 or 2010, Wason added.
"We were asking for time to continue with the reformulation
process," Wason said following the vote, adding that the company
would try to negotiate a delay.
Many doctors question whether over-the-counter inhalers like
Primatene Mist should even be sold. Most recommend the use of
prescription albuterol inhalers.
"I'd like to see it go away, personally, because I'd like to
see people get proper treatment and I think people who are using
Primatene are not," said Dr. Kathleen Sheerin, an allergist with
the Atlanta Allergy & Asthma Clinic.
Tuesday's vote was only to consider whether Primatene Mist and
similar inhalers can be considered an "essential" use of
ozone-depleting chlorofluorocarbons. That's a requirement if they
are to be legally distributed.
Wyeth, based in Madison, N.J., argued that its product meets the
three criteria needed for it to be considered essential.
"It provides an important public health benefit, there's no
other OTC alternative to CFC epinephrine inhalers, and the
environmental risk from the release of CFCs from Primatene is small
and justified given the benefit it provides," Sullivan said.
One of the concerns with Primatene, which has been used since
the 1960s, is its effect on the heart, said Tim Op't Holt, a
respiratory therapist with Victory Health Partners, a Mobile, Ala.,
clinic for uninsured patients.
"It's like putting a tack in the wall with a sledgehammer,
because epinephrine has such a potent cardiovascular effect," Op't
Holt said.
Sullivan said, "The reality is, if every patient could have
access to prescription products, it would probably serve them
better."
For More Information:
Food and Drug Administration -- www.fda.gov