FDA Approves Painkiller Dsuvia Amid Criticism
The FDA has approved a new sublingual formulation of sufentanil, Dsuvia, for the management of acute pain in adults in medically supervised healthcare settings, such as hospitals, surgical centers, and emergency departments. The drug is supplied in a 30 microgram tablet in a single-dose, prefilled applicator for administration by a healthcare professional, and it will not be available in retail pharmacies or for outpatient use.
The FDA has approved a new sublingual formulation of sufentanil, Dsuvia, for the management of acute pain in adults in medically supervised healthcare settings, such as hospitals, surgical centers, and emergency departments. The drug is supplied in a 30 microgram tablet in a single-dose, prefilled applicator for administration by a healthcare professional, and it will not be available in retail pharmacies or for outpatient use.
The drug was developed in collaboration with the Department of Defense with the military population in mind. AcelRx Pharmaceticals, maker of the drug, explains that, in many care settings—including battlefield settings—patients may not have readily available access to intravenous (IV) treatments for pain, and intramuscular injections (currently the standard of care for battlefield patients) are not as effective as IV options at providing timely relief, and may not be effective in cases of severe trauma that involves hypovolemic shock.
As such, "We believe the unique features of Dsuvia are an important leap forward in the management of acute pain and patient care in these settings,” said AcelRx’s CEO, Vince Angotti, in a statement. Angotti
The approval of Dsuvia was based on the results of 3 phase 3 clinical
Approval of the drug was highly criticized; Raeford Brown, MD, chair of the FDA’s Anesthetic and Analgesic Drug Products Committee, urged the FDA not to approve Dsuvia. Writing in an October 18
In a statement, FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb, MD, sought to deflect criticism of the approval, saying that, “Looking beyond this particular drug approval, I believe that we should consider whether we should be doing more to evaluate each candidate opioid, not just as an independent review decision, but rather also to consider each novel opioid drug in the context of the overall therapeutic armamentarium that’s available to patients and providers.”
According to Gottlieb, “This opioid formulation, along with Dsuvia’s unique delivery device, was a priority medical product for the Pentagon because it fills a specific and important, but limited, unmet medical need in treating our nation’s soldiers on the battlefield.”
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