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In Web-posted information for consumers Tuesday, the FDA said the drug is used differently in Europe, affecting its decision.
A large enough dose of many pain relievers can kill, making it hard to use medication regulation to guard against suicide.
But Wolfe worries about longtime Darvon and Darvocet users who inch up their dose in hopes of better pain relief. A heart-toxic metabolite of the drug can linger in the body for 30 hours, so as little as one or two extra pills each time a dosage is due could quickly add up to damaging levels, Wolfe said. Too much can eventually interrupt the heart's electrical activity, a deadly condition known as heart block, he said.
By the FDA's count, about 21 million prescriptions were written for propoxyphene-containing drugs in 2007. Most popular is Darvocet or its generic equivalent, which combines the narcotic propoxyphene with the more common painkiller acetaminophen. At FDA's January meeting on the drug, officials cited studies showing most of the pain relief from Darvocet came from the acetaminophen component.
Wolfe cited data from the government's Drug Abuse Warning Network, which tracks emergency room visits, that counted 503 Darvon-related deaths in 2007, about 20 percent of them classified as suicides.
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On the Net:
FDA Q&A: http://tinyurl.com/npmo5u
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