U.S. Warns
Fentanyl Patients About Drug
By LAURAN NEERGAARD
The Associated Press
Friday, July 15, 2005; 8:58 PM
WASHINGTON -- The government is investigating 120 deaths among
users of patches that emit the painkiller fentanyl and warned
patients Friday to be sure to use the powerful narcotic properly
to avoid accidental overdose.
The Food and Drug Administration is probing whether any of the
deaths are related to inappropriate use of the painkiller or
factors related to the product's quality.
At least some may have been accidental overdoses, and reports
suggest patients or prescribers weren't aware of crucial safety
information on the drug's label, said FDA's Dr. Robert Meyer.
That prompted Friday's unusual public health advisory.
"Here are important warnings _ pay attention to them," Meyer
said.
Among the warnings in patient information sheets issued Friday:
_Fentanyl patches can cause trouble breathing, which can be
fatal. Get emergency help if you have trouble breathing or extreme
drowsiness with slowed breathing; feel faint, dizzy, confused;
or have other unusual symptoms. They can be signs that you were
prescribed too high a dose or took too much.
_Fentanyl patches are only for round-the-clock pain that is
moderate to severe and expected to last for weeks.
_The patches should not be your first narcotic painkiller; they're
only for people whose bodies are used to morphine or related
painkillers known as opioids.
_Do not use fentanyl patches if you have sudden or severe asthma,
or a gastrointestinal problem called paralytic ileus.
_Store patches out of reach of children and dispose of them
by sticking the adhesive sides together and flushing down the
toilet, not in trash cans where children can find them.
Abuse of fentanyl patches is a recurring problem because they
contain such a high concentration of the controlled substance.
But Meyer said the current concern stems from legitimate patient
use.
"The directions ... must be followed exactly to prevent
death or other severe side effects from overdosing," the
FDA warned in letters to doctors that also advise prescribing
the lowest possible dose.
The patches were first approved under the brand name Duragesic
in 1990, and a generic version hit the market in February. FDA
has reports of death among users of both, Meyer said. It's not
unusual to receive increased side-effect reports shortly after
a new product reaches consumers, he said
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