Mark Cuban's Cost Plus Drug Company announced yesterday that it has received temporary approval from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to import penicillin G benzathine into the United States to ease demand-driven shortages for babies born with syphilis.
The drug is produced by Portugal-based Atral Laboratories under the Lentocilin brand name, according to a June 11 letter from the company to healthcare providers. The adult and pediatric versions of the drug in the United States are made by Pfizer as Bicillin-LA.
Lentocilin is available as a powder and diluent for injection. In its letter, the company noted some differences between its drug and the US version, including labeling and the fact that it contains soy, which may cause allergic reactions in some people. It also said the packaging doesn't contain a warning that the drug could be fatal if given by other routes, but that the prescribing information emphasizes that Lentocilin must be administered only by deep muscular injection.
On X yesterday, Cuban said the shortage of the drug for babies with syphilis was worsened by the high price for the drug, which will be available through Cost Plus as a fraction of the cost, just $15 instead of $500.
Second temporary import approval for syphilis treatment
Lentocilin is the second drug the FDA has approved for temporary import to address US shortages. In January it allowed the temporary import of a similar drug from a French pharmaceutical company that makes penicillin G benzathine, which in the United States is made by Pfizer under the Extenciline brand name.
US syphilis rates are climbing, with notable spikes in 2020 and 2021. Rates of infections in newborns are 10 times higher than the 10-year average, the highest in three decades.