FDA: Cold Meds Not For Kids Under Age 2
FDA: Cold Meds
Not For Kids Under Age 2
WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP) â Very young children simply should not take some commonly used cold and cough medicines, federal health officials say in recommending that the âconsult your physicianâ advice to parents on the labels be dropped.
The preliminary recommendation from Food and Drug Administration safety official, would apply to decongestant use in children under age 2, and antihistamines in those younger than age 6, according to agency documents released September 28.
The more than 350 pages of documents are part of a broad and ongoing FDA examination of whether the roughly 800 medicines, many popular and widely used, are safe and effective in treating childrenâs colds and coughs.
FDA advisers are to take up the issue during an October 18â19 meeting. The FDA has not made a final decision on any label changes. Action is likely, pending a recommendation from outside experts.
The review came in response to a recently filed petition by Baltimore city officials, who charged that many over-the-counter cough and cold remedies can harm toddlers and preschoolers. Those officials, joined by the American Academy of Pediatrics, cite evidence that suggests the drugs are not only risky, but also do not work in the very young.
âThe basic question is, why should a product be so relentlessly marketed when itâs not safe or effective?â said Dr Joshua Sharfstein, Baltimoreâs health commissioner. âIt does not make sense, in the absence of information, to say âconsult a physician,â because they do not have superhuman powers. They cannot make a product safe or effective.â
The Consumer Healthcare Products Association, which represents makers of over-the-counter medicines, backs the recommendation that the cold and cough treatments not be used in children younger than age 2. Separately, for antihistamines, the group recommends adding a warning that the drugs not be used to sedate young children, president Linda Suydam said.
An FDA review of side-effect records filed with the agency between 1969 and September 2006, found 54 reports of deaths in children associated with decongestant medicines made with pseudoephedrine, phenylephrine, or ephedrine. It also found 69 reports of deaths associated with antihistamine medicines containing diphenhydramine, brompheniramine, or chlorpheniramine.
Most of the deaths were children younger than 2 years old.
The Baltimore petition came on the heels of a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report that found more than 1,500 toddlers and babies wound up in emergency rooms over a two-year period because of the drugs.
Also on Friday, the FDA gave drug companies until October 31 to stop making and selling any unapproved prescription medicines labeled for use by children younger than age 6 that contain the painkiller and cough suppressant hydrocodone.
The move is part of a broader effort to remove from sale an estimated 200 unapproved prescription cough medicines made with the narcotic.
Manufacturers of any other unapproved hydrocodone medicines, beyond those intended for young children, must stop making them by December 31 and cease shipping them by March 31, 2008, the FDA said. It said the order applies to most of the hydrocodone formulations sold as cough medicines.
The order does not apply to other hydrocodone formulations, including the seven cough suppressants made with the narcotic that do have FDA approval. Nor does it apply to pain-relief drugs like Vicodin, which combine hydrocodone and acetaminophen.