US Orders New Youth Warnings on Antidepressants
US Orders New Youth Warnings on Antidepressants
Fri Oct 15, 2004 06:10 PM ET
By Lisa Richwine
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=healthNews&storyID=6518047
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. government ordered antidepressant makers on
Friday to put tough warnings on the drugs to alert doctors, parents and patients
the medicines increase risks of suicidal behavior among children and teens.
The Food and Drug Administration said the information, to be written in bold
letters and highlighted in a black box, must also state whether the drug has
been cleared for use by children. Only Eli Lilly and Co.'s Prozac is
FDA-approved for treating pediatric depression.
The new warning labels should appear in the next month or two, the FDA said.
Some mental health groups and drug makers expressed reservations about using
a black box, the strongest warning the United States can put on prescription
drugs.
Noting that depression itself elevates suicide risk, the American Psychiatric
Association worried the boxed warning "may have a chilling effect" for patients
who could benefit from the drugs.
"This would put seriously ill patients at great risk," the group said in a
statement.
The warning will stress the need to monitor the behavior of youths who start
taking the medications. The chances of suicidal behavior appear greater during
the first few months of treatment, the FDA said in a statement.
"The new warning language does not prohibit the use of antidepressants in
children and adolescents. Rather, it warns of the risk of suicidal (behavior)
and encourages prescribers to balance this risk with clinical need," the FDA
said.
The warnings will apply to all antidepressants "because the currently
available data are not adequate to exclude any single medication from the
increased risk," the FDA said.
The agency is developing a pamphlet explaining the safety risks in
patient-friendly language for distribution with each antidepressant prescription
or refill.
To make sure patients receive the pamphlet, the FDA told manufacturers to
devise special packaging that contains only one course of therapy, rather than
distributing the drugs in bulk. Patients will get a container sealed by the drug
maker with the pamphlet included. Continued
...
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http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=healthNews&storyID=6518047