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In Brief: Mucinex

   
The Medical Letter on Drugs and Therapeutics • Feb 14, 2005  (Issue 1202)
., Rockefeller University ADVISORY BOARD: Philip D. Hansten, Pharm. D., University of Washington Jules Hirsch ...
Patients may be asking health care providers about the safety and effectiveness of Mucinex (Adams), which is being heavily advertised on television and elsewhere for treatment of respiratory congestion. These ads suggest that Mucinex is a new drug, when actually it is an extended-release formulation of guaifenesin, an old expectorant. Guaifenesin increases the volume of secretions in the respiratory tract, which facilitates removal of viscous mucus by coughing. Medical Letter consultants have not been impressed by its effectiveness. Guaifenesin is in the category of drugs - Generally...
Med Lett Drugs Ther. 2005 Feb 14;47(1202):16 |  Show IntroductionHide Introduction

Correction: Resperate for Hypertension

   
The Medical Letter on Drugs and Therapeutics • Aug 27, 2007  (Issue 1268)
. Hansten, Pharm.D., University of Washington ADVISORY BOARD: Jules Hirsch, M.D., Rockefeller University ...
(Med Lett Drugs Ther 2007; 49:55) The second sentence in the article ("The FDA does not require proof of effectiveness for approval of devices with minimal potential for harm, such as this one.") should have been omitted. It would apply to a Class I device, but the FDA has classified Resperate as a Class II device.
Med Lett Drugs Ther. 2007 Aug 27;49(1268):72 |  Show IntroductionHide Introduction

Correction: Low Dose Transdermal Estrogens

   
The Medical Letter on Drugs and Therapeutics • Oct 08, 2007  (Issue 1271)
. Hansten, Pharm.D., University of Washington ADVISORY BOARD: Jules Hirsch, M.D., Rockefeller University ...
The Medical Letter article (Med Lett Drugs Ther 2007; 49:71) on Low-Dose Transdermal Estrogens said that Elestrin has been marketed in Europe since 1976. Actually it is EstroGel (Ascend Therapeutics), a similar product, that has been available in Europe since 1976.
Med Lett Drugs Ther. 2007 Oct 8;49(1271):84 |  Show IntroductionHide Introduction

Safety of Canadian Drugs

   
The Medical Letter on Drugs and Therapeutics • Dec 08, 2003  (Issue 1171)
, M.D., Ph.D., Rockefeller University CONTRIBUTING EDITOR: Philip D. Hansten, Pharm.D., University ...
Questions have been raised in the US press recently about the safety of Canadian drugs. The process of drug approval in Canada is similar to that in the US (D Paul, Int J Med Marketing 2001; 1:224). More than 90% of drugs available in Canada have also been approved by the FDA. Most of these drugs come from the same manufacturers as drugs in the US. Health Canada takes longer on average to release drugs than the FDA does; more than half the drugs discontinued for safety reasons by the FDA between 1992 and 2001 had not been approved for use in Canada (NS Rawson and KI Kaitin, Ann Pharmacother...
Med Lett Drugs Ther. 2003 Dec 8;45(1171):100 |  Show IntroductionHide Introduction

Addendum: Dermal Fillers

   
The Medical Letter on Drugs and Therapeutics • Jul 16, 2007  (Issue 1265)
. Hansten, Pharm.D., University of Washington ADVISORY BOARD: Jules Hirsch, M.D., Rockefeller University ...
Some Medical Letter consultants have suggested that our recent article on dermal fillers (Med Lett Drugs Ther 2007; 49:39) should have included stronger warnings about the risk of fillers that are not biodegradable, such as Artefill. The polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA, the same material that makes up Plexiglas) beads in Artefill can over time, even with the best technique, cause foreignbody granulomas and hypertrophic scarring, which may require surgical removal. Granulomas and nodules have been especially frequent when Artefill was injected into the lips. Complications are less likely with...
Med Lett Drugs Ther. 2007 Jul 16;49(1265):59 |  Show IntroductionHide Introduction

Copyright Violations

   
The Medical Letter on Drugs and Therapeutics • Apr 29, 2002  (Issue 1129)
Goodstein, Amy Faucard ASSISTANT EDITOR: Susie Wong CONTRIBUTING EDITORS: Philip D. Hansten, Pharm. D ...
The Medical Letter is a nonprofit organization supported entirely by subscription fees and sales of books, software and individual issues. We do not accept advertisements, grants, donations or gifts. We do not sell large numbers of reprints to pharmaceutical manufacturers.

We ask our readers to respect our copyright. We offer electronic access to our issues to individual subscribers and, for a reasonable fee, site licenses for electronic access to organizations like pharmaceutical companies and universities.

Med Lett Drugs Ther. 2002 Apr 29;44(1129):42 |  Show IntroductionHide Introduction

In Brief: Varenicline (Chantix) Revisited

   
The Medical Letter on Drugs and Therapeutics • Nov 19, 2007  (Issue 1274)
EDITOR, DRUG INTERACTIONS: Philip D. Hansten, Pharm.D., University of Washington ADVISORY BOARD ...
When the nicotine receptor partial agonist varenicline (Chantix – Pfizer) was first marketed, The Medical Letter concluded that it was moderately effective in increasing smoking cessation rates.1 More recent publications and the clinical experience of Medical Letter consultants now suggest that varenicline is the most effective drug available for this indication, more effective than nicotine replacement therapy or bupropion SR (Zyban).2,3 A word of caution: exacerbations of psychiatric illness have been reported in patients who took higher-than-recommended starting doses of varenicline.4,5...
Med Lett Drugs Ther. 2007 Nov 19;49(1274):93-6 |  Show IntroductionHide Introduction

In Brief: Dexrazoxane for Anthracycline Extravasation

   
The Medical Letter on Drugs and Therapeutics • Dec 03, 2007  (Issue 1275)
EDITOR, DRUG INTERACTIONS: Philip D. Hansten, Pharm.D., University of Washington ADVISORY BOARD ...
The FDA has approved a new formulation of dexrazoxane (Totect) for treatment of extravasation from intravenous (IV) anthracyclines such as doxorubicin (Adriamycin, and others). Dexrazoxane has been available since 1995 as Zinecard for protection against the cardiac toxicity of anthracyclines (Med Lett Drugs Ther 1995; 37:110). It is also available generically. The drug’s precise mechanism of action is not known, but anthracyclines are vesicants that bind to DNA and act as oxidizing agents in the presence of iron. Dexrazoxane is a topoisomerase inhibitor, possibly interfering with...
Med Lett Drugs Ther. 2007 Dec 3;49(1275):100 |  Show IntroductionHide Introduction

In Brief: Orlistat OTC for Weight Loss

   
The Medical Letter on Drugs and Therapeutics • Jun 18, 2007  (Issue 1263)
. Hansten, Pharm.D., University of Washington ADVISORY BOARD: Jules Hirsch, M.D., Rockefeller University ...
The FDA has approved over-the-counter (OTC) sale of the weight-loss drug orlistat (Xenical – Roche)1 as alli (GlaxoSmithKline), to be used in combination with a reduced-calorie, low-fat diet. Orlistat binds to gastric and pancreatic lipases, preventing absorption of about 30% of dietary fat with the 120-mg prescription dose, and 25% with the 60-mg OTC dose. A 16-week controlled trial of the OTC dose (60 mg 3 times daily with meals) in overweight, not obese, patients (average BMI 26.8) on a reduced-calorie, low-fat diet found that patients taking the drug lost 1.15 kg more than those taking...
Med Lett Drugs Ther. 2007 Jun 18;49(1263):49 |  Show IntroductionHide Introduction

In Brief: Anaphylaxis with Omalizumab (Xolair)

   
The Medical Letter on Drugs and Therapeutics • Jul 16, 2007  (Issue 1265)
INTERACTIONS: Philip D. Hansten, Pharm.D., University of Washington ADVISORY BOARD: Jules Hirsch, M.D ...
The FDA has received new reports of serious and life-threatening hypersensitivity reactions to omalizumab (Xolair – Genentech), a monoclonal anti-IgE antibody injected subcutaneously for treatment of asthma (Med Lett Drugs Ther 2003; 45:67), and has added a black-box warning to the package insert.Postmarketing reports submitted to the FDA included 124 reports of anaphylaxis among an estimated 57,300 patients (0.2%) who might have been treated with the drug between June 2003 and December 2006. Anaphylaxis occurred after the first dose of Xolair in 39% of cases, after a 2nd dose in 19%, after...
Med Lett Drugs Ther. 2007 Jul 16;49(1265):59 |  Show IntroductionHide Introduction