Guest guest Posted September 23, 2005 Report Share Posted September 23, 2005 FDA rejects parecoxib, only injectable COX-2 inhibitor  Sep 20, 2005  Gandey New York, NY - Pfizer announced today that it received a letter from the US Food and Drug Administration alerting it that its injectable COX-2 selective agent is " nonapprovable. " The product, parecoxib sodium (Dynastat), is currently available in Europe and is indicated for short-term treatment of postoperative pain. This is not the first time the FDA has rejected parecoxib and, as previously reported by rheumawire, the agency issued its first nonapprovable letter in 2001 to Pharmaciathe drug developer at the time. Pfizer had been comarketing the product during this period but has since acquired Pharmacia. The FDA declined a request for comment about the decision.  As the only injectable COX-2 specific inhibitor, parecoxib sodium provides an important option in the treatment of acute pain in the postsurgical setting.  In a news release addressing the issue, company officials said they plan to meet with the FDA to discuss the concerns. Pfizer points out that parecoxib sodiumalong with many other COX-2 inhibitorswas recently reviewed at length by the European Agency for the Evaluation of Medicinal Products (EMEA) and considered to have a favorable benefit-to-risk profile. But this prodrug to valdecoxib has many critics Parecoxib sodium, however, is a prodrug to another Pfizer product valdecoxib (Bextra)and that COX-2 inhibitor has received frosty reviews internationally. In April, European, American, and Canadian regulators urged Pfizer to withdraw the product due to a lack of adequate safety data and an absence of demonstrated advantages compared with other nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. Earlier this year at an FDA advisory meeting examining the benefits and risks of NSAIDs, panelists offered harsh criticism about valdecoxib. As previously reported by rheumawire, committee members questioned whether the product should have ever been approved at all considering the " paucity of data " and the additional concern over adverse skin reactions. Dr Curt Furberg (Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, NC) said that in the absence of strong evidence, the committees needed to reconsider whether valdecoxib should remain on the market. " Perhaps we have to face up to this and take it off the market, " he said at the meeting. But Pfizer counters that the new prodrug to valdecoxib has been shown to reduce the need for opioids to control pain following surgery. The company told reporters, " As the only injectable COX-2 specific inhibitor, parecoxib sodium provides physicians and patients with an important option in the treatment of acute pain in the postsurgical setting. " http://www.jointandbone.org/viewArticle.do?primaryKey=564651 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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