The Food and Drug Administration published draft guidelines outlining testing standards for harder-to-abuse generic painkillers. The agency has already approved five brand-name opioid pain drugs which are designed to discourage abuse.
The current version of OxyContin, for example, is difficult to crush, discouraging abusers from snorting or dissolving the tablets to get high.
But these abuse-deterrent painkillers represent a small fraction of the market for opioid pain drugs, which is dominated by low-cost generics.
Generic drugs receive a streamlined review process at the FDA, which helps speed their path to market and reduce the prices passed onto consumers. Generally, manufacturers only need show that their products are chemically equivalent to the original version, rather than conduct new clinical studies in patients.
Today's proposal comes just days after the FDA said it would add a new boxed warning the most serious type to some 175 immediate-release painkillers, including both branded and generics.
Califf's confirmation was held up by Senate lawmakers who said the agency needed to do more to combat opioid abuse. For years, the agency only made modest changes to the drugs, emphasising the need to keep medications accessible to patients with chronic pain.
In its announcement, the FDA acknowledged that evidence on the benefits of abuse-deterrent opioids is still emerging.
"We recognise that abuse-deterrent technology is still evolving and is only one piece of a much broader strategy to combat the problem of opioid abuse," Califf said in a printed statement. "But strongly encouraging innovation to increase access to generic forms of abuse-deterrent opioid medications is an important element in that strategy.
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