Dozens of deaths have been linked to medications that have never been reviewed by the government for safety and effectiveness but are still covered under Medicaid, an Associated Press analysis of federal data has found.
Taxpayers have shelled out at least $200 million since 2004 for such drugs, and millions of private patients are taking them as well.
The AP analysis found that Medicaid paid nearly $198 million from 2004 to 2007 for more than 100 unapproved drugs, mostly for common conditions such as colds and pain. Data for 2008 were not available but unapproved drugs still are being sold. The AP checked the medications against FDA databases, using agency guidelines to determine if they were unapproved. The FDA says there may be thousands of such drugs on the market.
The medications date back decades, before the Food and Drug Administration tightened its review of drugs in the early 1960s. The FDA says it is trying to squeeze them from the market, but conflicting federal laws allow the Medicaid health program for low-income people to pay for them.
Medicaid officials acknowledge the problem, but say they need help from Congress to fix it. The FDA and Medicaid are part of the Health and Human Services Department, but the FDA has yet to compile a master list of unapproved drugs, and Medicaid — which may be the biggest purchaser — keeps paying.
"I think this is something we ought to look at very hard, and we ought to fix it," said Medicaid chief Herb Kuhn. "It raises a whole set of questions, not only in terms of safety, but in the efficiency of the program — to make sure we are getting the right set of services for beneficiaries."
At a time when families, businesses and government are struggling with health care costs and 46 million people are uninsured, payments for questionable medications amount to an unplugged leak in the system.
Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, has asked the HHS inspector general to investigate.
That unapproved prescription drugs can be sold in the United States surprises even doctors and pharmacists. But the FDA estimates they account for 2 percent of all prescriptions filled by U.S. pharmacies, about 72 million scripts a year. Private insurance plans also cover them.
The roots of the problem go back in time, tangled in layers of legalese.
It wasn't until 1962 that Congress ordered the FDA to review all new medications for effectiveness. Thousands of drugs already on the market were also supposed to be evaluated. But some manufacturers claimed their medications were grandfathered under earlier laws, and even under the 1962 bill.
Then, in the early 1980s, a safety scandal erupted over one of those medications. E-Ferol, a high potency vitamin E injection, was linked to serious reactions in some 100 premature babies, 40 of whom died.
In response, the FDA started a program to weed out drugs it had never reviewed scientifically. Yet some medications continued to escape scrutiny.
Sometimes, the medications do not help patients. In other cases, the FDA says, they have made people sicker, maybe even killed them. This year, for example, the FDA banned injectable versions of a gout drug called colchicine after receiving reports of 23 deaths. Investigators found the unapproved drug had a very narrow margin of safety, and patients easily could receive a toxic dose leading to complications such as organ failure.
Critics say the FDA's case-by-case enforcement approach is not working.
"The FDA does not appear to have a systematic mechanism to report these drugs out," said Jon Glaudemans, senior vice president of Avalere Health, a health care industry information company, "and there doesn't seem to be a systematic process by which health insurance programs can validate their status. And everyone is pointing the finger at someone else as to why we can't get there."
In most cases, doctors, pharmacists and patients are not aware the drugs are unapproved.
"Over the years, they have become fully entrenched in the system," said Patti Manolakis, a Charlotte, N.C., pharmacist who has studied the issue. Only a few unapproved drugs are truly essential and should remain on the market, she added.
Tackling the problem is made harder by confusing — and sometimes conflicting — laws, regulations and responsibilities that pertain to different government agencies.
Medicaid officials said their program, which serves the poor and disabled, is allowed to pay for unapproved drugs until the FDA orders a specific medication off the market. But that can take years.
Compare that with Medicare, the health care program for older people.
Medicare's prescription program is not supposed to cover unapproved drugs. Medicare has purged hundreds of such medications from its coverage lists, but continues to find others.
It might be easier to sort things out if the FDA compiled a master list of unapproved drugs, but the agency hasn't. FDA officials say that would be difficult because many manufacturers do not list unapproved products with the agency. Yet, the AP found many that were listed — a possible starting point for a list.
Among the drugs the AP's research identified were Carbofed, for colds and flu; Hylira, a dry skin ointment; Andehist, a decongestant, and ICAR Prenatal, a vitamin tablet. Medicaid data show the program paid $7.3 million for Carbofed products from 2004 to 2007; $146,000 for Hylira; $4.8 million for Andehist products, and $900,000 for ICAR.
Grassley said the system is failing taxpayers and consumers.
"The problem I see is bureaucrats don't want to make a decision," Grassley said. "There is no reason why this should be such a house of mirrors when so much public money is being spent." Grassley is considering introducing legislation to ensure that consumers are told when a medication is unapproved.
FDA officials say they tell Medicaid and Medicare when the agency moves to ban an unapproved drug, so the programs can stop paying.
"The situation is complicated by the fact that Medicaid and Medicare have a different regulatory regime than FDA does," said FDA compliance lawyer Michael Levy. "There are products that we may consider to be illegally marketed that could be legally reimbursed under their law."
The FDA began its latest crackdown on unapproved drugs two years ago and has taken action against nine types of medications and dozens of companies. Typically, the agency orders manufacturers to stop making and shipping drugs, and it also has seized millions of dollars' worth of medications. But federal law does not provide fines for selling unapproved drugs, and criminal prosecutions are rare.
Some manufacturers of unapproved drugs say their products predate FDA regulation and are "grandfathered in."
"These are drugs that don't require an FDA approval," said Bill Peters, chief financial officer of Hi-Tech Pharmacal in Amityville, N.Y. "These are products with active ingredients that have been on the market for a long time." The company is moving away from older products, Peters said, and its new market offerings are FDA-approved.
Levy said the FDA is skeptical that any drugs now being sold are entitled to "grandfather" status. To qualify, they would have to be identical to medications sold decades ago in formulation and other important aspects.
The agency is targeting drugs linked to fraud, ones that do not work and, above all, those with safety risks. While the crackdown has helped, it does not appear to have solved the problem.
The gout drug banned by the FDA this February is not the only recent case involving safety problems.
Last year, the FDA banned unapproved cough medicines containing hydrocodone, a potent narcotic. Some had directions for medicating children as young as age 2, although no hydrocodone cough products have been shown to be safe and effective for children under 6.
In a 2006 case, the agency received 21 reports of children younger than 2 who died after taking unapproved cold and allergy medications containing carbinoxamine, an allergy drug that also acts as a powerful sedative. Regulators banned all products that contained carbinoxamine in combination with other cold medicines.
"We as Americans have a belief that all the prescription drugs that are available to us have been reviewed and approved by the FDA," said Manolakis, the pharmacist. "I think the presence of these drugs shows we have a false sense of security."
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On the Net:
FDA's unapproved drugs page: http://tinyurl.com/4tv2sb
An interesting program along the same lines here on TV today, the same drugs our drug manufacturers sell to Canada can cost as much as 50 percent more here. Our politicians didn`t allow the government to negotiate price, but a country with 1/10th the number of people does?
According to the show even the AARP pushed for the approval of the plan because they knew the companies they set up for Medicare part D coverage could make millions. Is it any wonder Medicare has problems?
In case yall didn't know, the FDA means "For Damning Americans". That is what it really means.
The problem here is that this squeezes out drugs that are no longer under any patent, and widely available in generic forms. As it's not profitable to go through a lengthy review on such drugs, many of them are simply dropping off the market instead of getting approved. A prescription decongestant I had been using for years, which I needed to stave off debilitating sinus headaches, went off the market because of this, despite the fact that it was a combination of approved drugs available over the counter. Now I'm stuck paying large sums either for non-generic prescriptions that are no more effective or for over the counter medicine that is not covered under my insurance.
Thanks for keeping me safe, FDA. I really appreciate paying three times as much for medicine I need to function because of your idiotic decision to put a drug that had been on the market for decades and was comprised entirely of other approved drugs through a regulatory procedure that made it no longer profitable to sell.
Please provide your list. Please post it on the net and send it to the AMA and the CMA so that we can be on the watch for these drugs.
You have mentioned a gout drug that we were taught about in medical school (decades ago); we were taught that it should be used as a last resort when gout was severe enough to cause permanent damage. When used, it may be being used properly. All drugs, by the way, have some sort of risk and side effects.
One drug your article did not mention is aspirin, which is an unapproved, over the counter medicine, which can be prescribed. It's effects are well known and it is still the best drug for some uses. In fact, there is medical controversy as to whether it is safer or less safe than some other drugs used for pain and inflammation.
Others of those drugs might be brands that were not approved rather than classes were not approved, which brings us to the problem of generic substitution. Most insurers demand generic substitution to obtain cheaper prices, but not all generics formulations are equal and, therefore, sometimes one might not work or might have more side effects. Being generics, they did not have to pass the stringent testing that the originals did. This problem is well known among the anti-seizure drugs, especially. The doctor has to fill out extra forms and the patient may have to pay more for the drugs that work.
It would, indeed, be wonderful if more expenditure and effort were put into drug testing and safety. Thank you for your article.
It seems All of them are after the dollar, helping people or keeping them safe don't mean much unless it makes them money. Prescription drugs are the biggest rip-off there is, and for the most part what causes the high cost of health insurance.
The Government needs to stop taking kickbacks from Drug Companies, and lower the cost so we can afford the drug we so despartley to help with our ailments. Cut out the doughnut holes in our insurances for our drugs and keep them the same price as when we get our drugs before our doughnut hole kicks in. The Gov. dosen't give us that much money to live on, and we have bills to pay. I myself get 1/4 of the pay I used to get when I worked and am now on disability. I'd love to continue to work but I am too sick.
What the hell, did you really expect the food and drug administration to be any more effective or honest than your failed president?
Some of us need to wake up and join the living, after all this is exactly what President Elect Obama has been trying to drive into the heads of the un-thinking.
The Government needs to stop taking kickbacks from Drug Companies, and lower the cost so we can afford the drug we so despartley to help with our ailments. Cut out the doughnut holes in our insurances for our drugs and keep them the same price as when we get our drugs before our doughnut hole kicks in. The Gov. dosen't give us that much money to live on, and we have bills to pay. I myself get 1/4 of the pay I used to get when I worked and am now on disability. I'd love to continue to work but I am too sick. Medicare drugs are way to expensive.
Good luck Tom Daschle, incoming Secretary of Health and Human Services which is the parent for the FDA:
Office of the Secretary of Health and Human Services (OS) - currently led by Secretary Michael Leavitt
Office of the Deputy Secretary of Health and Human Services (ODS) - currently led Deputy Secretary by Tevi Troy
Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health (OASH) - currently led by Assistant Secretary, Admiral Joxel García, USPHS
Public Health Service (PHS) - under the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) - currently led by Director Julie Gerberding
Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response
Last year, the FDA banned unapproved cough medicines containing hydrocodone, a potent narcotic. Some had directions for medicating children as young as age 2, although no hydrocodone cough products have been shown to be safe and effective for children under 6.
Hydrocone prescriptions bring a lot of money in Kentucky, Tennesee, and one of the Virginias when sold by drug dealers. It's really quite a network and very big business in those regions. Some of the dealers go to other states, like Florida, to multiple doctors, others buy it off the Internet and sell the pills. I wonder what else is on that list that dealers are selling. They need to be STOPPED.
As for the rest of the article, it says that these drugs are bought by the Medicaid and Medicare programs - programs for the poor or retired (old people). The real problem? Our most vulnerable populations are being exposed to these things and don't have much choice. They are exposed to dangers simply because of their economic status and the government is the pill-pusher. I'd love to know what the cost was to fix any problems associated with taking these medications (if the patients even survived - which is another, immeasurable cost).
We do need a list of all meds not regulated by the FDA - full disclosure - immediately.
Medicaid and medicare people are 'guinea pigs'.
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