FDA sends Bayer Warning Letters for Marketing Unapproved Drugs

The U.S. today sent Warning Letters to concerning two unlawful, over-the-counter (OTC) aspirin products — Women’s + Calcium ( Women’s) and with Heart Advantage ( Heart Advantage).

The products, which contain aspirin with either or calcium, are unapproved new drugs that require an approved new drug application in order to be legally marketed. In addition to being labeled for use as a pain reliever, both products are labeled for use in reducing the risks of heart disease. Women’s is also labeled for use in “fighting” osteoporosis. Neither product has been approved by the FDA for such uses. These drug uses require a health care professional’s diagnosis and supervision, and therefore these products cannot be labeled for use by consumers and sold over-the-counter (OTC).

“The FDA considers these products new drugs and thus they must undergo the FDA’s ,” said Mike Chappell, the FDA’s acting associate commissioner for regulatory affairs. “The FDA will take enforcement action against manufacturers found to be violating the law or attempting to circumvent the .”

Heart Advantage combines aspirin and in a single tablet. Women’s combines aspirin and calcium carbonate in a single tablet. The products are labeled as being a combination of a drug and a dietary supplement, but when a drug and a dietary supplement are combined in a single tablet, the product is regulated by FDA as a drug. According to the labeling, the in Heart Advantage are intended to lower blood cholesterol and the calcium in Women’s is intended to strengthen bones to fight osteoporosis. Although certain calcium-containing dietary supplements may bear claims to reduce the risk of osteoporosis, products that are labeled to “fight” or otherwise treat osteoporosis are drugs that require FDA approval. Similarly, although certain phytosterol-containing dietary supplements may bear claims to reduce the risk of coronary heart disease, and may note that the mechanism by which achieve this effect is through lowering blood cholesterol, direct claims to lower cholesterol are claims to prevent or treat coronary heart disease and hypercholesterolemia, which is also a disease. Products bearing such claims require an approved new drug application from FDA in order to be legally marketed, and cannot be legally marketed for OTC use.

Under its OTC drug monograph system, FDA allows some drugs to be marketed without first obtaining agency approval. These drugs must comply with applicable monographs, that is, regulations that set requirements for the drugs’ labeling and formulation, as well as the indications (uses) for which the drugs can be marketed. OTC drugs that do not meet these requirements and that lack FDA approval are considered illegal, . Heart Advantage and Women’s do not meet the conditions in any applicable OTC monograph, and do not have FDA approval. Therefore, Heart Advantage and Women’s are unapproved new drugs.

In addition, Heart Advantage and Women’s are misbranded because their labeling lacks adequate directions for use by consumers. In order for a drug to have adequate directions for use, the directions must be written so that consumers can use the product safely for its intended purpose, without the supervision of a health care professional. The use of these products for treatment of heart disease and osteoporosis requires diagnosis and supervision by a health care professional to ensure safe use. Therefore, it is not possible, in OTC drug product labeling, for these products to have adequate directions for their intended uses. The products also are misbranded because their labeling do not have adequate warnings and are misleading. Among other things, the labeling for the aspirin in the products includes directions and warnings regarding short term use, but these directions and warnings are contradicted by other directions for the and calcium that promote the products’ daily use without any time limits. The result is a mixed message about the products’ purposes and the length of time for which the products can be safely used.

“The marketing of these is troubling,” said Janet Woodcock, M.D., director of the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research. “Because OTC drugs are widely used by consumers, without supervision by a doctor or other health care professional, the overuse or misuse of these aspirin-containing products can put consumers at risk for internal bleeding and other adverse events. It is essential that companies obtain FDA approval and fully comply with FDA regulations.”

Although the FDA is not aware of significant adverse events associated with these products, the agency is concerned because neither product has been approved by FDA for its marketed uses.

Today’s actions reaffirm the position taken by FDA in two previously issued Warning Letters - one sent to B.F. Ascher & Co., Inc., Lenexa, KS, regarding Melagesic PM, and the other to Omni Nutraceuticals, Inc., Los Angeles, CA regarding Inholtra Joint Pain products. In those letters, the FDA stated that drug ingredients combined with dietary ingredients in a single dosage form require agency approval to be legally marketed in the United States.

Companies that do not resolve violations in FDA Warning Letters risk enforcement action, such as injunctions and/or seizure of illegal products.

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