Saturday, December 6, 2008

FDA Wants More Asthma Inhalers To Go CFC Free

Updated October 12, 2020

Broken link in the original post.

You might also be interested in:

Transition from CFC Propelled Albuterol Inhalers to HFA Propelled Albuterol Inhalers: Questions and Answers - FDA.gov


- - -  original post follows below  - - -

Current ("old") inhalers use chlorofluorocarbon (CFC) propellants. Because CFCs damage the ozone layer, the FDA will prohibit the sale of CFC inhalers commonly used in the treatment of asthma and other respiratory conditions. This NewsChief article reports that the FDA intends to ban even more CFC-containing inhalers in the future, "Deadlines for other inhalers to go eco-friendly." Here are the highlights that you'll want to know about . . .
  • The most commonly used inhalers (used on a daily basis) go CFC-free by end of 2008
  • Other types of inhalers targeted to go CFC-free after 2008 include: Cromolyn, nedocromil, Combivent, metaproterenol, pirbuterol, flunisolide, triamcinolone, epinephrine.
  • FDA final decisions are pending to give manufacturers enough time to reformulate
Previous Posts: Switch To New Asthma Inhalers Now - To Get Used To Them 

1 comment:

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