Sodium oxybate
Clinical data | |
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Trade names | Xyrem, Lumryz, others[1] |
Other names | NSC-84223, WY-3478 |
AHFS/Drugs.com | Monograph |
MedlinePlus | a605032 |
License data | |
intravenous[2] | |
ATC code | |
Legal status | |
Legal status | |
Pharmacokinetic data | |
Bioavailability | 88%[4] |
Protein binding | <1%[4] |
Elimination half-life | 0.5 to 1 hour. |
Excretion | Almost entirely by biotransformation to carbon dioxide, which is then eliminated by expiration |
Identifiers | |
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Sodium oxybate, sold under the brand name Xyrem among others, is a medication used to treat symptoms of narcolepsy: sudden muscle weakness and excessive daytime sleepiness.[4][6][7] It is used sometimes in France and Italy as an anesthetic given intravenously;[8]: 15, 27–28 it is also approved and used in Italy and in Austria to treat alcohol dependence and alcohol withdrawal syndrome.[9]
Sodium oxybate is the sodium salt of γ-hydroxybutyric acid (GHB). The clinical trials for narcolepsy were conducted just as abuse of GHB as a club drug and date rape drug became a matter of public concern. In 2000, GHB was made a Schedule I controlled substance in the United States, while sodium oxybate, when used under an FDA NDA or IND application, was classified as a Schedule III controlled substance for medicinal use under the Controlled Substances Act, with illicit use subject to Schedule I penalties.[10]
Sodium oxybate was approved for use by the US
It was approved for treating symptoms of narcolepsy in the European Union in 2005.[6]
Orphan Medical had
Medical use
Clinical use of sodium oxybate was introduced in Europe in 1964 as an anesthetic given intravenously, but it was not widely used since it sometimes caused seizures. As of 2006, it was still authorized for this use in France and Italy but not widely used.[8]: 15, 27–28
The major use of sodium oxybate is in treating two of the symptoms of
Investigations of its use in dealing with alcohol withdrawal syndrome and in the maintenance of abstinence began in 1989 in Italy, where it was then approved in these indications in 1991. It has also been approved for use in Austria.[16] Over the years, several studies were conducted to further substantiate sodium oxybate efficacy in these indications. Results of small studies suggest it may be "better than naltrexone and disulfiram regarding abstinence maintenance and prevention of craving in the medium term, i.e. 3–12 months."[17] In a 2014 review, Gillian Keating described sodium oxybate as a "useful option for the treatment of alcohol withdrawal syndrome and for the maintenance of abstinence in alcohol dependence."[16] However, a 2018 review recognised the evidence for its efficacy but noted safety concerns and concluded that "studies are still limited and investigations including a larger number of patients are needed."[18]
In this context, a study published in 2019 analyzed safety data from 40 clinical trials and from a pharmacovigilance database covering around 260,000 alcohol-dependent patients treated with sodium oxybate in Italy and Austria.[19] Results showed that sodium oxybate was well-tolerated, risks were controlled, and no safety concerns were reported.[19] The approved sodium oxybate dose regimen for the treatment of alcohol dependence (i.e., around 3.2 g/day) is lower than the one for the treatment of narcolepsy (4.5–9 g/night).[19] In 2023, a PhD thesis conducted at the University of Amsterdam, presented the results of large clinical trials, including a phase 3 trial, and of meta-analyses that confirmed the efficacy, good tolerance, and safety of sodium oxybate in the maintenance of abstinence, particularly in severe alcohol-dependent patients.[20] A group of international researchers has also considered in 2018 that "sodium oxybate has an excellent risk benefit ratio for this indication" and that it is "a very promising therapeutic option for the most severe alcohol-dependent patients and may provide substantial clinical and public health benefit and costs".[21]
Multiple trials have shown sodium oxybate to be effective in treating important symptoms of fibromyalgia, such as pain and poor sleep structure.[22] However, in 2010, the FDA voted unanimously against this indication, with commenters citing its potential for abuse as a street drug.
Pregnant women should not take it, and women should not become pregnant while taking it. It is excreted in breast milk and should not be used by mothers who are breast feeding.[6]
Adverse effects
The US label for sodium oxybate has a
Sodium oxybate causes dizziness, nausea, and headache in 10% to 20% of people who take it; nausea is more common in women than men.[6][29] Between 1% and 10% of people experience nasal congestion, runny nose, or sore throat, loss of appetite, distorted sense of taste, cataplexy, weakness, nervousness or anxiety, depressed mood, nightmares or abnormal dreams, sleep paralysis, sleepwalking, or other sleep disturbances including insomnia, sleepiness or sedation, falls, vertigo, tremor, balance disorder, cognitive issues including disturbance in attention, confusion or disorientation, numbed sense of touch, tingling, blurred vision, heart palpitations, high blood pressure, shortness of breath, snoring, vomiting, diarrhea, stomach pain, excessive sweating, rashes, joint pain, muscle pain, back pain, muscle spasms, bedwetting, urinary incontinence, and swelling of the limbs.[6]
Overdose
Reports of overdose in medical literature are generally from abuse, and often involve other drugs as well. Symptoms include vomiting, excessive sweating, periods of stopped breathing, seizures, agitation, loss of psychomotor skills, and coma. Overdose can lead to death due to respiratory depression. People who overdose may die from asphyxiation resulting from choking on vomit and/or aspiration. People that have overdosed or suspected of overdosing may need to be made to vomit, be intubated, or/and put on a ventilator.[4][6]
Interactions
Sodium oxybate should not be used with other drugs that are CNS depressants like alcohol or sedatives.
Pharmacology
The
Sodium oxybate is rapidly absorbed and is about 88% bioavailable; very little is bound to plasma protein. The average time to peak plasma concentration ranges from 0.5 to 1.25 hours. Very little of the drug is excreted; instead, it is mostly metabolized through several steps into carbon dioxide and water.[4]
Chemistry
Sodium oxybate is the sodium
4H
7NaO
3) and its molar mass is 126.09 g mol−1. It is highly hydrophilic.[4] Treating the salt with acid allows the carboxylic acid
History
In May 1990, GHB was introduced as a
At the same time, research on the use of sodium oxybate had formalized, as a company called Orphan Medical Inc. had filed an Investigational New Drug application and was running clinical trials with the intention of gaining regulatory approval for use to treat narcolepsy.[8]: 18–25, 28 [38]: 10 In 1996, Orphan contracted with Lonza Group, a contract manufacturer for supply of the drug.[39]
In 2000, the
Sodium oxybate was approved by the FDA in 2002 under the brand name Xyrem with a strict risk control strategy to prevent drug diversion and control the risk of abuse by people to whom it was prescribed.[42]
Orphan Medical licensed the right to market the drug in Europe to Celltech in 2003.[43][44] In 2004, Celltech was acquired by UCB[45] and in 2005 Jazz Pharmaceuticals acquired Orphan Medical.[46]
In January 2007, Valeant announced that Jazz Pharmaceuticals had licensed the rights to market Xyrem in Canada to Valeant.[47] Jazz Pharmaceuticals and Valeant terminated the agreement in 2017.[48]
In July 2007, Jazz Pharmaceuticals and their subsidiary, Orphan Medical, pleaded guilty to a criminal charge of felony misbranding in their marketing of sodium oxybate; they also settled a civil suit at the same time. Jazz Pharmaceuticals paid $20 million in total and agreed to a corporate integrity agreement and to implement internal reforms.[13][49][50] The FDA sent Jazz Pharmaceuticals an FDA warning letter about safety violations in September 2007.[51]
In 2010, the FDA rejected Jazz Pharmaceuticals' New Drug Application for use of sodium oxybate in fibromyalgia.[52]
In October 2011, the FDA sent Jazz Pharmaceuticals another FDA warning letter for failing to collect, evaluate, and promptly report adverse effects to the FDA after it started marketing the drug.[51] It sent another letter in 2013 saying that the problems described in the 2011 letter appeared to be resolved.[53]
In January 2017, the FDA approved the first generic sodium oxybate product for narcolepsy symptoms, which is also subject to the same REMS program conditions as the original.
In May 2023, the FDA approved Lumryz, an extended-release oral suspension of sodium oxybate.[5][58]
Society and culture
Regulation
In the United States, GHB is a Schedule I controlled substance, while sodium oxybate, when used under an FDA NDA or IND application, is classified as a Schedule III controlled substance for medicinal use under the Controlled Substances Act, with illicit use subject to Schedule I penalties.[10]
In Canada and the European Union, as of 2009, it is classified as a Schedule III and a Schedule IV controlled substance, respectively.[11]
Cost
In the US, the cost in Q3 2015 of Xyrem was $5,468.09 per 180 mL bottle at 500 mg/mL— a 10 to 15-day supply when prescribed at the typical 6–9 mg per day. As of 2017 the cost of sodium oxybate in the UK was £540.00 to £1,080.00 for a thirty-day supply,[59] which at typical doses is £6,500 to £13,100 per year.[60]
Jazz Pharmaceuticals raised the price of Xyrem 841% earning a total of $569 million in 2013 and representing more than 50% of Jazz Pharmaceutical's revenues.[12] In 2007 it cost $2.04; by 2014 it cost $19.40 per 1-milliliter dose.[12] Jazz offers copay assistance to help patients access the expensive drug.[12] According to DRX, a drug-data report published by Bloomberg, Jazz Pharmaceuticals price increase on Xyrem topped the list of price hikes in 2014.[12]
Historically,
The first authorized generic sodium oxybate, produced by Hikma Pharmaceuticals, was made available in January 2023.[57]
In European Union countries, the government either provides national health insurance (as in the
Names
Sodium oxybate is the common name for the chemical; it has no international nonproprietary name (INN).[66]
As of April 2018, sodium oxybate is sold under the following brands: Alcover (Italy), Gamma-OH (France), Natrii oxybutyras Kalceks (Latvia), Somsanit (Germany), Xyrem (many countries by Jazz Pharmaceuticals and UCB).[1]
In 2023, the first authorized generic of Xyrem was made available in the US.[57]
Research
Jazz Pharmaceuticals has been developing JZP-386, a deuterated analog of sodium oxybate. The company presented Phase I results in 2015, stating that deuterium-related effects made it necessary to do further formulation work as part of the drug's development.[67]
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