FDA and DEA Silent as Rx Opioid Shortages Worsen
/By Pat Anson, PNN Editor
Shortages of opioid pain medication in the U.S. appear to be worsening, with no apparent action from the FDA or DEA to ease the suffering of patients left in uncontrolled pain or going into withdrawal.
Last week the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists (ASHP) added another widely used painkiller to its drug shortage list: oxycodone/acetaminophen tablets, which are more widely known under the brand names Percocet and Endocet. The medication is typically prescribed for moderate to severe pain.
The ASHP reports that five drug makers are either running low or have exhausted their supply of oxycodone/acetaminophen in 2.5, 5, 7.5 and 10mg tablets. Amneal, Major and Rhodes did not provide ASHP with a reason for the shortage, while Camber and KVK-Tech said they were “awaiting DEA quota approval for active ingredient.”
Amneal, Camber and KVK-Tech said the tablets were on back order with no estimated resupply date. Major and Rhodes said additional supplies were expected in mid-September or early August, respectively. Limited supplies and doses of oxycodone/acetaminophen tablets are still available from other drug manufacturers.
There are already shortages of two other widely used painkillers. The AHSP put immediate release oxycodone on its list of drug shortages in March and added hydrocodone/acetaminophen tablets to the list in May.
But those shortages have yet to be acknowledged by the FDA. Asked why oxycodone and hydrocodone were missing from the FDA’s drug shortage list, a spokesperson referred PNN to an FDA website for “Frequently Asked Questions about Drug Shortages.”
One possible explanation, according to the website, is that the FDA “focuses on shortages that have the greatest impact on public health.” Shortages are also not reported if they are expected to be resolved quickly, if other substitutes are available, or if there are only local supply issues.
Manufacturers are required to report shortages and supply interruptions to the FDA, while providers, hospitals, pharmacies and consumers can report them by email to drugshortages@fda.hhs.gov.
‘No One Seemed to Care’
At PNN, we hear from readers almost daily about opioid shortages.
“I am now past my usual fill date,” said Rick Martin, a retired pharmacist in Las Vegas who lives with chronic back pain. “My CVS pharmacist manager told me that she was told by their wholesaler that hydrocodone won't be available until the middle of August.”
Martin said pharmacists at Walgreens, Smith’s and Sav-on have also told him they were out of oxycodone and hydrocodone tablets.
“It's been spotty for 6 months but now seems entrenched. I got switched to tramadol. Not as effective, but I can just barely get by. I've heard that's what doctors are doing. Tramadol or Tylenol with codeine,” he told PNN.
Steve Keating, another Las Vegas resident, has been taking oxycodone for chronic neck pain after his vehicle was rear-ended by another driver. He had no problems getting his prescription refilled at either Walgreens or CVS, until last month. Now he is out of pain medication.
“I began having withdrawal symptoms. No one seemed to care,” said Keating, who turns 73 this month. “The pharmacy recommendations were to obtain tramadol, which I've tried in the past and found ineffective. I cannot take opiates with acetaminophen as it upsets my stomach.
“It seems that there is a huge gap between prescribers, pharmacies and whatever governmental agencies are involved. Do these governmental idiots not realize how important the medication we've been prescribed for months or years is to give us some degree of a better quality of life?”
There are several reasons behind the opioid shortages. It started with misleading information that demonized prescription opioids and the false portrayal of patients and doctors as the primary cause of the “opioid epidemic.” That was followed by medical guidelines that discourage opioid prescribing and a tsunami of opioid litigation that cost drug makers, wholesalers and pharmacies tens of billions of dollars.
Egged on by politicians, the Drug Enforcement Administration also aggressively cut production quotas for opioids and other controlled substances, reducing the supply of oxycodone by 65% and hydrocodone by 73% since 2013.
DEA PRODUCTION QUOTAS FOR OXYCODONE (KILOGRAMS)
The DEA quotas are rigidly enforced, making it difficult for a drug maker to boost production of opioids when another manufacturer has shortages or discontinues production, like Teva Pharmaceutical recently announced.
It’s not just opioids in short supply. Drugs used to treat cancer and attention deficit disorder (ADHD) are also hard to get. These problems have been building in plain sight for years, yet the FDA’s commissioner says there is little his agency can do to correct them.
“We wish that we could fix all these things, but we don't make the medicines and we can't tell someone that they must make medicines. There are some things that are out of our control,” FDA Commissioner Robert Califf, MD, said in a May interview.
That’s not exactly true. The DEA sets annual production quotas for drug makers only after consulting with the FDA. The 2023 DEA quotas for hydrocodone, oxycodone and several other opioids were cut — for the 7th year in a row — based on the advice of the FDA.
“FDA predicts that levels of medical need for schedule II opioids in the United States in calendar year 2023 will decline on average 5.3 percent from calendar year 2022 levels,” the DEA said in a notice published last year in the Federal Register.
DEA administrator Anne Milgram, meanwhile, has not made any public comments about shortages of opioid medication. In a recent appearance on Meet the Press, she said illicit fentanyl was being used to make counterfeit versions of prescription opioids — the same legal drugs that are now in short supply due to DEA actions.
“They're pressing it into these fake pills made to look exactly like oxycodone or Percocet or or Adderall, when it's just fentanyl and filler. So tens of thousands of Americans are dying without having any idea that they're taking fentanyl,” Milgram said.
(Update: On August 1, Milgram and Califf released a joint letter saying the FDA and DEA were working “as quickly as possible” to resolve the drug shortages, but took no responsibility for causing them. The letter only addressed shortages of prescription stimulants used to treat ADHD, binge eating and narcolepsy. It makes no mention of opioid shortages.)