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Old medicine: When in doubt, throw it out

 

Washington Post Service

Most of the medications in my husband’s bathroom cabinet are outdated. There’s the chloroquine, filled June 2008, expired June 2009; the prescription-strength naproxen, dispensed October 2010, just expired; and the hydrocodone that should have been tossed more than a year ago. Even the CVS brand of Caladryl expired in 2007.

The only seemingly viable medical supply in his cupboard is the TopCare Nasal Spray, which the box says is good through for another month. The bottle is pretty full, so there’s no chance he’ll mist his nose enough to finish it by then.

When I asked him about his expired reserve, he laughed and said he had worse squirreled away. The expiration dates don’t concern him, since none of the medications treat chronic, life-threatening ailments. He’s happy to pop old pills if he has a sore shoulder (the naproxen), and he will take a chance with the malaria meds (the chloroquine) on his next work trip to Africa.

Is this a good idea?

Probably not, said Shelly Burgess, a spokeswoman for the Food and Drug Administration. She said neither the FDA nor drug companies can guarantee what happens to an outdated medication. “The drug could retain its potency,” Burgess said, or “the drug could degrade into nontoxic impurities, giving rise to an ineffective product, or the drug could degrade into toxic impurities.”

In any event, she does not recommend swallowing medicine after its expiration date, even if it’s just a couple of months too old.

There are studies, however, that suggest a certain fudge factor can temper this rule.

A 2006 study in the Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences done by the FDA found that 88 percent of drugs held in the Strategic National Stockpile, a repository of medical supplies maintained around the country for emergency situations, had their shelf life extended “at least one year beyond their original expiration date” because an FDA testing program found they were still safe to use. Among the types of drugs that were extended were pain medications, antibiotics, antivirals and malaria drugs. The testing information “supports the assertion that many drug products, if properly stored, can be extended past the expiration date,” the study reported.

Desmond Hunt, a senior scientific liaison for the United States Pharmacopeia, the nonprofit group that sets standards for drugs used in this country, said it’s probably not fair to extrapolate that advice to your own medicine cabinet, however.

Medication that the average person buys, he said, “can go through many hands from the time it is shipped from the manufacturer until it reaches the end-user. During each handoff and during the transportation process, there is a potential for a drug product to be stored outside its labeled temperature requirements. It could sit on the tarmac in humidity, for example, or sit out in the rain.” In maintaining its stockpile, on the other hand, he said, the government “has a tight control over its products, who they buy from, how they are shipped and how they are stored. This is the best-case scenario.”

He added that “if you have a choice, I wouldn’t take an out-of-date medication.”

To get FDA approval, drug manufacturers must prove that their medications retain their potency throughout their promised shelf life. To do this, scientists expose the drugs to various temperatures and humidity levels and then check to see how well the packaging has held up and whether there has been a change in the look or smell of the medication. In the case of tablets, they then dissolve the drugs in a chemical solution to separate out the drug component and test whether its strength has diminished or remained stable. Drugs in liquid form receive comparable tests.

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