Stay Informed

Sign up for news & alerts

Already signed up?
Login here

take action
For every $1 states spend dollar sign on substance misuse and addiction, 94 cents go to shovel up the consequences instead of for treatment and prevention. TELL YOUR LEGISLATORS

What Can I Do?



Continuing Education
Free online courses for addiction counselors LEARN ONLINE

Get Help
Need alcohol or drug help for yourself or someone else? GET HELP

 

Naltrexone Drug Wins Initial FDA Approval
January 3, 2006

Share Share Email
Email
Print
Print
SubscribeSubscribe
Research Summary

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has granted conditional approval to Vivitrol, a once-a-month, naltrexone-based drug intended to curb craving for alcohol, Reuters reported Dec. 29.

The injectable drug, developed by Alkermes, Inc., is expected to hit the market in 2006. The company still has to provide FDA with additional data on the drug and meet other requirements in order to get full approval for Vivitrol.

Alkermes officials said that the drug will initially be marketed to people already in treatment for alcoholism. "At launch, our focus is on those patients who are motivated to stop" drinking, said Alkermes Chief Executive Officer Richard Pops. "There (are) enough patients in that 2.3 million people to have an enormous medical impact."

Some market analysts said that annual sales of the drug could top $500 million. "We believe Vivitrex could become the gold standard for treatment of alcohol dependence, particularly for patients with compliance issues," CIBC World Market analysts recently wrote.

Pops said having a monthly form of naltrexone "removes the need for daily decision making" about alcohol use.

COMMENTS ON THIS ARTICLE:
(Comments now appear first to last)

Posted by CAROL on 11 Nov 08 10:02 PM EST
FDA APPROVAL IS SIMPLY DUE TO VESTED INTEREST AND NOT THE PUBLIC SAFETY.

Your Turn! Post a public comment (guidelines):

Name:

Comment:
(limit 250
words)

Enter this word
(help):
Change

GUIDELINES: 
To keep this feature useful for everyone, please:

  1. Keep it clean, courteous, brief, and on-topic. Comments are for discussion of the above article, not general rants or manifestos. Serial comments intended to circumvent the 250-word limit may be deleted.

  2. Do not post promotional web links, personal information or requests for assistance (get help).

  3. Proof your comments carefully, use good spelling and punctuation, and don't use ALL CAPS. Comments are published immediately and cannot be edited.

Deceptive, slanderous and commercial posts are prohibited. We reserve the right to remove comments. (Report a comment).

Have questions or feedback? Contact us.