Murple
Enthusiast
Reged: 09/12/02
Posts: 278
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The DEA is in the process of making zopiclone (Imovane or Limovan) a controlled drug (Schedule IV) in the US. Probably will finish going through the process by mid April. Reason is that a US company is preparing to market it in the US under the brand name Lunesta (www.lunesta.com). This means that soon, ordering zopiclone from overseas will carry all the legal risks of ordering Ambien or Xanax. Shame... this was one of the last worthwhile sleep aids that was still legal to buy without a prescription.
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lancelot
Journeyman
Reged: 02/10/05
Posts: 98
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That way the pharms can sell Lunesta at 5X the price of zopiclone. Whatever demand there is for a chemical, the pharms will have the FDA schedule it so that they can sell it under a brand name for a higher price. That is why i have no problems buying generics from india and other other countries who do no follow copyright laws for meds.
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Murple
Enthusiast
Reged: 09/12/02
Posts: 278
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Yeah... zopiclone's been on the market since 1989, but now that it's going to be marketed in the US (for a very high price - 28% more expensive than Sonata and 10% more than Ambien) it's being scheduled so people cant legally order it cheaply from overseas. Marketings going to be aggressive too, theyve got 1250 salespeople on their way out to pimp Lunesta to doctors. Check out this article:
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/health/2002177896_healthsleepingpill13.html
Quote:
Sunday, February 13, 2005 - Page updated at 12:00 a.m.
New sleeping aid may open eyes
By Melissa Healy
Los Angeles Times
U.S. insomniacs will need only to turn on late-night television in the next several months to learn there's a new kid on the block in the $2 billion market for sleep drugs.
In mid-December, the Food and Drug Administration approved a new prescription sleep aid a hypnotic, in medical parlance called eszopiclone. But while it is already the talk of the town among sleep-medicine specialists, the drug's manufacturer is planning a $60 million campaign to take the news directly to the sleepless and baggy-eyed in advertisements wedged between reruns, classic movies and political gabfests. On late-night TV, the companion of insomniacs everywhere, that'll buy a lot of advertising, and the drug, named Lunesta, is expected to be one of this year's most heavily marketed medications.
Lunesta breaks new ground on at least two counts. When taken at bedtime, the drug not only puts insomnia sufferers to sleep for a full six or seven hours; it also carries a low risk of grogginess the next day. This double-barreled approach offers a balm for those who tend to waken frequently during the night or too early in the morning.
Second, it is the first prescription sleep drug that the Food and Drug Administration has essentially declared safe and effective for long-term use. In approving other sleep medications, including the widely used medications Ambien and Sonata, the FDA has consistently cautioned that they should be used for short periods usually no more than a week to 10 days because longer-term studies of their safety and effectiveness have not been done.
Sepracor, the Massachusetts-based pharmaceutical company that manufactures Lunesta, says it will dispatch an army of 1,250 sales representatives to promote the drug to primary-care physicians, psychiatrists and hospital physicians the doctors who are most often the first to spot and treat insomnia about the new medication's value.
Will cost a bit more
At an average wholesale price of $3.70 per tablet, Lunesta will not be a cheap sleep, however. It will be about 28 percent more expensive than Sonata and about 10 percent more expensive than Ambien, two new-generation sleep medications that, like Lunesta, are called non-benzodiazepines.
The newest drug is a derivative of a medication long available in Europe and Latin America. In preparing the prescription sleep aid for FDA approval, Sepracor sponsored short-term studies demonstrating the drug's effectiveness for those who sometimes can't fall asleep as well as five separate studies of the drug's use for chronic insomniacs people who regularly have trouble falling or staying asleep. Several of the studies lasted six months, and one was extended to a year of continuous use, far longer than the 12-week trials that led to FDA approval of Ambien and Sonata.
An estimated 70 million people suffer from sleep disorders and wakefulness, according to the National Institutes of Health, and 60 percent of those are chronic insomniacs.
The studies of Lunesta found that patients taking it for the long haul did not build up a tolerance for the drug a concern that worries many doctors who prescribe sleep aids for long periods. And when its use was stopped "cold turkey," according to Dr. Andrew Krystal, who ran one of the trials at Duke University, researchers found few to none of the withdrawal symptoms including delirium and a worsening of insomnia symptoms that patients sometimes experience when discontinuing other prescription sleep aids.
Krystal says the entry of eszopiclone into the field of sleep drugs probably will help broaden physicians' views of chronic insomnia and its treatment. Sleep specialists have long held that sleep difficulties must be a symptom of some underlying medical condition, such as depression, anxiety disorder, sleep apnea or restless leg syndrome.
"The problem we've come to appreciate is, there is a significant number of people 15 percent of insomnia patients who have long-term insomnia but no associated underlying condition we can identify," Krystal said. As primary-care physicians find they have a medication approved for such patients' treatment, they may be more likely to offer help.
Doctors have long treated those patients with antidepressants and sleep aids that were not approved by the FDA for long-term use, and often were not approved as medications for insomnia at all. But although physicians frequently (and legally) prescribe medications for such "off-label" uses, "we were really not sure" what their long-term effects would be, says Dr. Michael J. Sateia, a professor of psychiatry at Dartmouth Medical School and president of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine.
The studies undergirding Lunesta's FDA approval should set many physicians more at ease and probably will encourage the makers of sleep medications already on the market to conduct long-term safety and effectiveness studies of their own.
No "hangover"
For Terri Bagley, a 43-year-old owner of a housecleaning service in Pelham, N.C., and a chronic insomniac who had tried other sleep medications, Lunesta was the key to regaining a foothold on happiness. Bagley, who participated in Lunesta's one-year trial at Duke University Medical Center, said the drug brought quick sleep and relief from nighttime wakening, without the "hangover" she got from other sleep medications. "It made me feel happy. I'm a pretty happy person. But when you're not real tired all the time, you're even happier."
When Lunesta hits the streets, adds Bagley, "there'll be a lot more well-rested people out there. There may not be as much road rage."
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guineapig
Newbie
Reged: 12/21/04
Posts: 27
Loc: u.k
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I am in U.K and phoned my Docs this morning for my 2 monthly script for Zopiclone. I was told that they can no longer offer me this med. as it is being 'taken off the market'?? Its the first I've heard about it! Amy feedback would be gratefully recieved. Thanks.
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Murple
Enthusiast
Reged: 09/12/02
Posts: 278
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Thats interesting. I wonder if the Imovane brand (or whatever version of it is sold in the UK) is being taken off the market and being replaced with Lunesta... or if zopiclone's being taken off the UK market completely... or if your doctor is just trying to cut you off. You should give a call/email to the UK's equivalent of the FDA, whatever its called there. Please keep us posted.
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lancelot
Journeyman
Reged: 02/10/05
Posts: 98
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Imovane brand is probably being taken off the market for Lunesta. time to go generic zopiclone or until generic lunesta is made much later.
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guineapig
Newbie
Reged: 12/21/04
Posts: 27
Loc: u.k
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I've had a couple of versions, the Imovane, another I cant remember and my last box is just marked Zopiclone tablets and are made by Merck a generics company in the U.K. So am assuming its the actual zopiclone. I have an appointment with Doc in just over a week, so will ask her then and post. Thanks for replies. Any more info. would be great. Thank you.
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FredW
Member
Reged: 10/31/02
Posts: 136
Loc: USA
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This is the worst medicine in regards to the bitter taste it leaves in your mouth for 24 hours. It is the worst metallic taste I could not stand.
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Fred
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EAH
Journeyman
Reged: 09/10/03
Posts: 69
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Yeah, once the general public discovers the chemical/metallic taste I wonder if they will be will to pay so much. I don't mind the taste at all but I know I am the exception.
Eee
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guineapig
Newbie
Reged: 12/21/04
Posts: 27
Loc: u.k
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I agree, the taste is completely vile but they work for me, whereas Zolpidem (Ambien) have little effect. Zopiclone give me a feeling of well being and detachment..I saw my Doc yesterday and apparently both drugs were marketed as being non-addictive compared to benzo's. Now, its been discovered by the British medical association they are actually MORE addictive and I was given Temazepam (Rivotril) instead! I could have predicted this as there must be a lot of people who sussed that if you dont sleep on them you get a great chilled feeling that lasts for hours!!
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Murple
Enthusiast
Reged: 09/12/02
Posts: 278
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I find it especially amusing that just as the British government is pulling this off the market as being more dangerous than benzos, the US FDA has approved it as being the only sleep aid thats safe for long-term daily use. The FDA here just had several major public scandals involving letting dangerous drugs or drug uses through the safety screening process (Vioxx, and the use of SSRIs in children) which resulted in heart attacks and a bunch of kiddie suicides. Anybody care to start the countdown until the first class action lawsuit over Lunesta (zopiclone)?
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