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Unger noted that patients getting injections for cosmetic use receive much smaller doses than those treated for spasms.
"You're basically trying to relax the muscle, and the amount you need depends on the size of the muscle," Unger said, adding, "So a muscle in the leg can be quite large and requires a fair amount of the product."
Botox and competitors Myobloc, from Solstice Neurosciences, and Dysport, from Medicis, will carry a boxed warning, the most serious type the agency enforces.
The new labeling urges physicians to tell patients about the risks of botulin-based drugs and to seek medical care if they develop any symptoms.
Irvine, Calif.-based Allergan said it would cooperate with the agency and stressed that the problems reported by FDA are rare.
"Botox has been marketed in the United States for nearly 20 years, its safety and efficacy profile are well understood, and reports of suspected distant spread have been rare," the company said in a statement.
FDA's action came the same day it approved Dysport, the third botulin-based drug now on the U.S. market. It joins Botox in the market for treating wrinkle lines on the forehead. Medicis' drug is not approved for cosmetic uses.
Regulators stressed that physicians cannot interchange the products.
"By switching patients from one drug to the other there's a risk of underdosing, and more importantly, overdosing," said Unger.
Shares of Allergan fell 96 cents, or 2 percent, to $46.31 in midday trading while Medicis Pharmaceutical Corp. rose $1.95, or 14 percent, to $15.52.
[Associated
Press;
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