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History of Modified-Release Morphine and Opioid/Antagonist Combinations

History of Modified-Release Morphine and Opioid/Antagonist Combinations. Ellen Fields, M.D., M.P.H. Medical Team Leader DAARP. Overview of Presentation. Modified Release Morphine Products Important labeling changes Approved opioid/antagonist combination products.

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History of Modified-Release Morphine and Opioid/Antagonist Combinations

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  1. History of Modified-Release Morphine and Opioid/Antagonist Combinations Ellen Fields, M.D., M.P.H. Medical Team Leader DAARP

  2. Overview of Presentation • Modified Release Morphine Products • Important labeling changes • Approved opioid/antagonist combination products

  3. Modified-Release Morphine Products • MS CONTIN • Oramorph SR • Kadian • Avinza

  4. Schedule II • Indication: Management of moderate-to severe pain when a continuous around-the-clock opioid analgesic is needed for an extended period of time • Extended-release opioid formulations provide for improved compliance, convenience for the patient and longer pain relief than immediate-release products

  5. MS CONTIN • Approved May 1987 • Priority review • Strengths: 15mg, 30mg, 60mg, 100mg, 200mg • Dosing: Q12 hours • Major labeling changes • May 2003: Box Warning added • Restricted 100mg and 200mg to opioid tolerant patients • Abuse liability, not prn, not to be broken, chewed, crushed, dissolved • May 2007: strengthens language throughout the label regarding abuse, misuse and diversion

  6. *100 mg and 200 mg are for use in opioid-tolerant patients only WARNING: MS CONTIN contains morphine sulfate, an opioid agonist and a Schedule II controlled substance, with an abuse liability similar to other opioid analgesics. Morphine can be abused in a manner similar to other opioid agonists, legal or illicit. This should be considered when prescribing or dispensing MS CONTIN in situations where the physician or pharmacist is concerned about an increased risk of misuse, abuse, or diversion. MS CONTIN Tablets are a controlled-release oral formulation of morphine sulfate indicated for the management of moderate to severe pain when a continuous, around-the-clock opioid analgesic is needed for an extended period of time. MS CONTIN Tablets are NOT intended for use as a prn analgesic. MS CONTIN 100 and 200 mg Tablets ARE FOR USE IN OPIOID-TOLERANT PATIENTS ONLY. These tablet strengths may cause fatal respiratory depression when administered to patients not previously exposed to opioids. MS CONTIN TABLETS ARE TO BE SWALLOWED WHOLE AND ARE NOT TO BE BROKEN, CHEWED, DISSOLVED, OR CRUSHED. TAKING BROKEN, CHEWED, DISSOLVED, OR CRUSHED MS CONTIN TABLETS LEADS TO RAPID RELEASE AND ABSORPTION OF A POTENTIALLY FATALDOSE OF MORPHINE.

  7. MS CONTIN contains morphine sulfate, an opioid agonist and a Schedule II controlled substance, with an abuse liability similar to other opioid analgesics. Morphine can be abused in a manner similar to other opioid agonists, legal or illicit. This should be considered when prescribing or dispensing MS CONTIN in situations where the physician or pharmacist is concerned about an increased risk of misuse, abuse, or diversion

  8. MS CONTIN Tablets are a controlled-release oral formulation of morphine sulfate indicated for the management of moderate to severe pain when a continuous, around-the-clock opioid analgesic is needed for an extended period of time. MS CONTIN Tablets are NOT intended for use as a prn analgesic. MS CONTIN 100 and 200 mg Tablets ARE FOR USE IN OPIOID-TOLERANT PATIENTS ONLY. These tablet strengths may cause fatal respiratory depression when administered to patients not previously exposed to opioids.

  9. MS CONTIN tablets are to be swallowed whole and are not to be broken, chewed, dissolved, or crushed. Taking broken, chewed, dissolved, or crushed MS CONTIN tablets leads to rapid release and absorption of a potentially fatal dose of morphine.

  10. Oramorph • Approved August 1991 • Strengths:15mg, 30mg 60mg, and 100mg tablets • Dosing: every 8 to 12 hours. • Label being updated

  11. Kadian • Approved July 1996 • Initial strengths: 20mg, 50mg, and 100mg capsules • Added strengths: 10mg, 30mg, 60mg, 80mg, and 200mg capsules (2005) • Dosing every 12 to 24 hours • The capsules are to be swallowed whole or may be sprinkled on applesauce • 2006: Box Warning added

  12. KADIAN® capsules are to be swallowed whole or the contents of the capsules sprinkled on apple sauce. The pellets in the capsules are not to be chewed, crushed, or dissolved due to the risk of rapid release and absorption of a potentially fatal dose of morphine

  13. Avinza • Approved March 2002 • Strengths: 30mg, 60mg, 90mg, and 120mg capsules • Dosing every 24 hours • The capsules may be swallowed whole or sprinkled on applesauce. • Maximum dose: 1600 mg/day • Related to an inactive ingredient • 60mg, 90mg, 120mg for opioid-tolerant only • October 2005: language added that alcohol compromises the controlled release properties of the formulation and causes it to act as an immediate release product (dose-dumping)

  14. Interaction with Alcohol • 2004: Palladone (modified-release hydromorphone) dose-dumps in presence of alcohol in vivo and removed from market • All modified-release opioids underwent in vitro dissolution studieswith ETOH, followed by in vivo if needed • 40% (all), 20%, 4% (Avinza and Kadian) • Kadian: positive in vitro, negative in vivo • Avinza: positive in vitro, not tested in vivo • MS Contin, Oramorph: negative in vitro

  15. Avinza 30mg

  16. Standard Alcohol LanguagePharmacodynamic Interaction Tradename may be expected to have additive effects when used in conjunction with alcohol, other opioids, or illicit drugs that cause central nervous system depression because respiratory depression, hypotension, and profound sedation or coma may result Tradename should not be taken with alcohol or other CNS depressants….

  17. Wording Added to Avinza LabelPhysico-chemical interaction “Patients must not consume alcoholic beverages while on Avinza therapy. Additionally, patients must not use prescription or non-prescription medications containing alcohol while on Avinza therapy. Consumption of alcohol while taking Avinza may result in the rapid release and absorption of a potentially fatal dose of morphine.”

  18. Opioid/Antagonist Combinations

  19. 21CFR300.50(a) “Two or more drugs may be combined in a single dosage form when each component makes a contribution to the claimed effect…” • A special case of this rule is where a component is added…To minimize the potential for abuse of the principal active ingredient

  20. Approved • Talwin NX (pentazocine/naloxone) • Suboxone (buprenorphine/naloxone) • Naloxone HCl was added to both products in order to deter intravenous abuse of the drugs

  21. Naloxone • Pure opioid agonist • Causes complete or partial reversal of opioid effects • Administered IV • Very limited systemic bioavailability by non-parenteral routes of administration

  22. Talwin NX • Talwin (pentazocine) was approved in 1967 for the relief of moderate-to-severe pain. • No known potential for abuse • Not-scheduled • 1968: First reports of dependence, limited • Late 1970’s: Increasing frequency of cases of abuse, diversion, overdose and death • T’s and Blues: Talwin and tripelennamine (antihistamine, blue tablet) • Intravenous abuse of crushed tablets • Substitute for heroin

  23. Efforts to mitigate abuse: • 1979: Schedule IV • Labeling changed to include postmarketing events of addiction • 1982: Reformulated with naloxone (pentazocine 50mg/naloxone 0.5mg) • Marketed starting April 1983 • January 1983: Talwin removed from market • Reports of abuse declined during two years after withdrawal of Talwin from the market

  24. Scheduled 1979 Removal of Talwin

  25. Scheduled 1979 Removal of Talwin

  26. Possible Factors Contributing to the Decrease in Abuse of Talwin • Scheduling of Talwin • Removal of single entity Talwin from the market • Introduction of Talwin NX • Change in the availability of heroin

  27. Suboxone • Combination of buprenorphine HCl (a partial mu opioid agonist) and Naloxone HCl (a full opioid antagonist) • Approved in October, 2002 for the treatment of opioid dependence, along with Subutex, which is buprenorphine HCl without the addition of Naloxone • The two products are interchangeable in terms of the pharmacokinetics of buprenorphine

  28. Suboxone was designed to be administered sublingually • absorption of the Naloxone component caused no clinically significant effect although plasma levels were measurable • In clinical pharmacology studies, if Suboxone was improperly administered via the intravenous route, the naloxone component would become available and block the euphoric effects of the opioid component or precipitate opioid withdrawal • There have been no formal studies to assess the impact of Suboxone in terms of abuse

  29. Suboxone Abuse • Reports of abuse • Sublingual • Nasal inhalation • Injection • Baltimore Sun, December 2007 • Maine health department reported in August that misuse spread rapidly as more Suboxone was prescribed. Abusers of the drug "have figured out how to separate out the naloxone" to inject the buprenorphine…. • In Massachusetts, …"A lot of people are injecting it. They're getting hooked on it."

  30. Summary

  31. Modified-Release Morphine • Four approved products • Highest doses for opioid-tolerant patients • Box Warning • One product has labeling regarding dose-dumping in alcohol

  32. Opioid-Antagonist Combinations • Two approved products • Talwin NX and Suboxone • Naloxone added to mitigate IV abuse • Some evidence that introduction of Talwin NX led to decreased pentazocine abuse • Multifactorial • No formal assessment of Suboxone impact on abuse • Multiple reports of IV and intranasal abuse

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