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Mar. 06, 2006

 

Medical patches and heat a dangerous combination,

experts say

BY DAWN FALLIK

Knight Ridder Newspapers

 

PHILADELPHIA - Medical experts say medicated patches,

used by 12 million people for a range of ailments, can

become unsafe when heated by exercise, soaking in a

hot tub, or even a high fever. And they think patients

should be warned.

 

In November, the agency issued a warning about

birth-control patches after studies showed that women

using them had 60 percent more estrogen in their blood

than those on the pill, giving them a higher risk of

potentially fatal side effects.

 

As a result, the FDA said on Thursday that it was

launching " an exhaustive review " into the safety of

patches themselves.

 

In the last 25 years, patch medications have morphed

from a simple motion-sickness drug to more than 30

different prescriptions used by 12 million people

worldwide for ailments ranging from bladder control to

heart disease.

 

Yet even as companies market more and more versions -

the first antidepressant patch was approved last week

- medical experts worry that patches are unsafe when

heated, whether from a high fever or from soaking in a

hot tub.

 

" Most people don't realize that heat is going to

increase absorption rates, even to toxic levels, " said

Michael Cohen, director of the Institute for Safe

Medication Practices, an industry watchdog in

Huntingdon Valley. " It's something patients should be

warned about. "

 

The experts say that heat increases the absorption

rate on patches, sometimes with fatal consequences.

 

All patches work the same way: The drug seeps through

the skin into the bloodstream, and increased blood

flow causes the body to absorb the drug faster, said

Bozena B. Michniak, who studies transdermal patch

delivery at the Center for Biomaterials at Rutgers

University's Piscataway campus.

 

But not all hot patches will necessarily cause harm.

 

" It depends on the drug and the patch, " Michniak said.

" We could all say there will be an effect and

absorption rate will increase, but how much? Many

factors play a role. "

 

The problem is most evident with the fentanyl patch,

which is 100 times more potent than morphine. Since it

was introduced in 1990, the drug has been linked to

120 deaths, the FDA reported.

 

FDA officials say that as few as 1 percent of all

serious side effects are reported to the agency. Its

database does not give details about the cause of

death. The agency has been criticized, most recently

in the recall on the arthritis pill Vioxx, for not

paying attention to problems early on.

 

Whether a drug comes in a patch or not, the FDA does

not say how many deaths should trigger an

investigation or a recall. In 2000, the agency pulled

the diabetes drug Rezulin after it was tied to 63

liver-failure deaths. Lotronex, a drug for irritable

bowel syndrome, was recalled after it was linked to

five deaths.

 

In 2004, patches overall were cited as the primary

cause of death in eight cases, including two teens on

birth-control patches, according to an Inquirer

analysis of an FDA database.

 

In 2003, three people died, including a 45-year-old

man and a 58-year-old woman on fentanyl pain patches.

 

Both years, the patch was a primary suspect in at

least 30 cases in which patients were hospitalized,

disabled or left with a life-threatening complication.

 

" The problems are real, they're happening and they're

underreported, " said Cohen, who sits on the FDA's Drug

Safety and Risk Management Advisory Committee. " It's

possible for people to get hurt. "

 

The FDA database, the Adverse Event Reporting System,

is based on mandatory reports of all kinds of drug

reactions from pharmaceutical companies and voluntary

data from doctors and hospitals. The data do not

include whether heat was a factor in the problem, but

mention the name of the drug, and whether it was a

primary, secondary or concomitant factor in the

incident.

 

The FDA database does not indicate with certainty that

the suspected drug caused a reaction. and does not

include final investigation results.

 

Studies as early as 1986 showed that heat can double

the rate at which the body absorbs medication, but

there were no public warnings until 1994.

 

That came after the death of a 36-year-old Montgomery

County, Pa., man.

 

Kurt Hophan was given a fentanyl pain patch after a

back injury. He went to his bedroom at his mother's

house in Glenside and fell asleep with a heating pad

and an electric blanket.

 

" When the heat from the pad and the electric blanket

came into contact with the patch, the amount of

fentanyl released into Mr. Hophan's bloodstream was

approximately one hundred (100) times greater than the

amount prescribed, " according to the judge's ruling in

a lawsuit filed against the drug's manufacturer by his

mother, Elaine Hophan.

 

He never woke up. He died on March 4, 1994.

 

In 2001, a jury awarded his mother $5 million in

compensatory damages. After an appeal, the case was

settled under a confidential agreement, said Stephen

Raynes, who represented Elaine Hophan.

 

The warning appeared three months after Hophan's

death. Johnson & Johnson declined further comment.

 

There's no question that there are benefits to patch

medication, and that millions of consumers use patches

safely.

 

They are easier on the body because medicine is

absorbed through the skin into the bloodstream,

without a " first pass " through the liver and the

stomach. That often means a smaller dose is required.

 

Plus, it's convenient.

 

" Patches improve compliance, particularly for people

who have to take medication several times a day or for

people who forget, " said Sean Hennessy, pharmacology

professor at the University of Pennsylvania and

another member of the FDA's drug safety committee.

 

And they are popular. In 2004, patch sales totaled

about $3.4 billion, according to Greystone Associates,

a medical market-research firm in New Hampshire.

 

The patch comes in two main forms: the liquid

reservoir and the matrix.

 

In the liquid-reservoir version, such as the fentanyl

patch, the medicine is embedded into a gel-like

substance in the center, and released through a

membrane into the skin.

 

The matrix patches contain the medication within the

adhesive that adheres to the skin, often using the

flesh as the rate control - because the skin can

absorb only so much, so fast.

 

The patch is not for every drug, said John Urquhart,

professor of biopharmaceutical sciences at the

University of California at San Francisco and one of

the creators of the original motion-sickness patch.

 

" A lot of morons out there think you can put a drug in

a patch and it will sell like hotcakes, " Urquhart

said.

 

To work well in a patch-delivery system, he said, the

drug has to be effective in small doses. The medicine

should not cause irritation (which increases

absorption), and should have a wide safety margin to

prevent accidental overdose that can occur when it is

heated.

 

Multiple studies have shown that heat has a sharp

effect. A 1986 study found that just 20 minutes of

bicycling with a nitroglycerin heart medication patch

increased concentration of the drug twofold to

threefold. Similar results were found after 30 minutes

in a sauna.

 

" In chemistry, if we want to speed up a reaction, you

apply heat, " said Robert Middleberg, laboratory

director of National Medical Services in Willow Grove,

Pa. " It's silly for us to believe that heat wouldn't

play a factor in a drug-delivery device that works

with the skin. "

 

The independent lab receives thousands of

unexplained-death cases from medical examiner's

offices nationwide. Of the 100 or so patch-related

deaths he gets each year, about 70 percent are caused

by patient misuse and 15 percent more are due to drug

abuse. The rest, Middleberg said, cannot be explained,

and he thinks they are likely due to a problem with

the patch.

 

" The dynamics of the patches are not really completely

understood, " he said.

 

Most of the patch-related deaths that Middleberg sees

involve fentanyl.

 

" You find reports of death with other patches, most

notably nitroglycerin patches, " he said. " But they are

really hard to prove because nitro just falls apart in

the body and you're left wondering what really

happened. "

 

One company, ZARS Pharma based in Salt Lake City,

specifically uses heat with its patch products,

including an anesthetic one approved by the FDA in

June and marketed by a Chadds Ford company, Endo

Pharmaceuticals Holdings Inc.

 

Their two patch products work differently. The pain

patch, under development, comes with a separate

device, similar to a heating pad, that is placed over

it. The anesthetic patch heats up when exposed to air,

much like over-the-counter hand warmers.

 

Skin temperature is usually about 89.6 degrees

Fahrenheit, but increasing that temperature up to

about 102 degrees can quadruple the absorption rate,

said Michael Ashburn, ZARS vice president for clinical

and regulatory affairs. That can happen in as little

as 20 minutes, he said.

 

" You have to be able to control the temperature so we

know what's getting through, " Ashburn said.

 

Although uncontrolled amounts of narcotics, such as

fentanyl, could have fatal results, it's unclear what

higher doses of other drugs could do.

 

" I don't think you can kill yourself with a nitro

patch; you'll just make yourself feel dizzy, " said

Gordon Flynn, professor of pharmaceutics at the

University of Michigan and a consultant for Mylan

Pharmaceuticals Inc. " You're not supposed to be on it

continuously. "

 

In December, the FDA began to study how heat affects

the absorption rates of all patches under various

circumstances, said Lucinda Buhse, director of the

FDA's Division of Pharmaceutical Analysis.

 

" We would like to develop a method that's applicable

across the board with different drugs and different

patches, " she said.

 

The investigation will focus on fentanyl and

birth-control patches first, to see how they react to

hot tub and sauna heat, among other scenarios.

 

Douglas Stokke, a spokesman for Johnson & Johnson,

which makes the fentanyl patch and Ortho Evra

birth-control patch, said the company did not have

clear information about the FDA study. When asked

whether doctors should warn patients about exposure to

heat while wearing a patch, he said: " Physicians

should be knowledgeable about the prescribing

information for these products and should be

prescribing them according to labeling. "

 

But, says Michniak, of Rutgers, those who use patches

should be careful about sitting in the sun, using

heating pads or doing anything else that might

increase the skin temperature for a long time.

 

" If it's not in the patient insert, they may not be as

aware as they should be, " she said.

 

One patch whose safety is being questioned is the

Ortho Evra birth-control patch. Last year, doctors

wrote more than 9.4 million prescriptions for it,

according to IMS Health, an industry monitoring firm

based in Plymouth Meeting.

 

In November, the FDA released a study saying that

women who wore the patch had far more estrogen in

their bloodstream than those who took the pill.

Researchers aren't sure why. Four months later,

Johnson & Johnson released a study stating that women

who wore the patch had twice the number of blood

clots, which can cause strokes and heart attacks.

 

On the same day, another study, published in the

journal Contraception, said there was no additional

risk compared with the pill's risks.

 

Vanessa Cullins, an ob/gyn and vice president for

medical affairs for Planned Parenthood, said the patch

came under fire unfairly.

 

In the J & J study, Cullins noted that rates for blood

clots were as high as four per 10,000 on the pill and

eight per 10,000 on the patch.

 

Cullins said that, even if the increase were real,

" it's still a very rare event. "

 

Women should weigh the risks and benefits of the

patch, she said, noting that it may not be appropriate

for those with a family history of blood clots or

strokes.

 

Since July, more than 40 lawsuits have been filed

nationwide, claiming that blood clots caused by the

patch killed or injured women.

 

While studies into patch safety continue, more

proposals for new transdermal medications are

appearing before the FDA.

 

Next up is Daytrana, a controversial methylphenidate

patch specifically for children with attention deficit

hyperactivity disorder. In June, FDA medical officer

Robert Levin said the patch resulted in " excessive

drug exposure at inappropriate times, " vomiting and a

high risk of causing a tic. He suggested that it not

be approved.

 

Seven months later, Levin changed his mind. In

December, he told an FDA advisory committee that the

patch, aimed at 6- to 12-year-old children, did not

cause significantly different problems than Concerta,

an ADHD pill. With one exception: Up to 22 percent of

those who used the patch became so sensitive to it

that they could never take the drug methylphenidate

again, in any form.

 

The ADHD patch lasts nine hours, and members worried

that children would be responsible for their removal

and not take it off in time. " Theoretically, it is

possible that continued exposure could increase the

risk of insomnia and other adverse events, " Levin

said.

 

The FDA did not respond to multiple requests to

interview Levin and to questions about the database.

 

The committee unanimously recommended the patch, but

only for children who cannot swallow pills. It is now

under FDA review.

 

http://www.contracostatimes.com/mld/cctimes/news/nation/14029417.htm

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