FDA Requires Boxed Warning For Metoclopramide Drug
27 February 2009 - 8:35AM
Dow Jones News
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration said Thursday it was
requiring manufacturers of metoclopramide, a drug used to treat
gastrointestinal disorders, to add a boxed warning to their drug
labels about the risk of developing a neurological disorder.
The agency said metoclopramide has been linked to tardive
dyskinesia, a neurological disorder often linked to certain types
of drug. The condition is marked by involuntary and repetitive
movements of the body, even after the drugs are no longer taken.
Current drug labels for metoclopramide already warn of the risk of
developing tardive dyskinesia. But requirement of a boxed warning,
which appears at the top of drug labels, means the agency is
strengthening the warning.
The FDA said development of tardive dyskinsia "is directly
related to the length of time a patient is taking metoclopramide
and the number of doses taken." The FDA said the elderly and people
who have been on the drug for a long time are at highest risk.
Metoclopramide, a generic drug, is used by more than two million
Americans and is made by several drug makers including Baxter
Healthcare Corp. (BAX), according to the FDA. The products are
available in a variety of formulations including tablets, syrups
and injections and are sold under brand names including Reglan
Tablets, Reglan Oral Disintegrating Tablets, Metoclopramide Oral
Solution and Reglan Injection.
"The chronic use of metoclopramide therapy should be avoided in
all but rare cases where the benefit is believed to outweigh the
risk," said Janet Woodcock, the director of FDA's Center for Drug
Evaluation and Research.
Metoclopramide works by speeding up the movement of the stomach
muscles and increases the rate at which the stomach empties into
the intestines. It is used as a short-term treatment of
gastroesophageal reflux disease in patients who have not responded
to other therapies, and to treat diabetic gastroparesis, the FDA
said. It's recommended that treatment not exceed three months.
-By Jennifer Corbett Dooren, Dow Jones Newswires; 202-862-9294;
jennifer.corbett@dowjones.com