RYA W. ZOBEL, District Judge.
The issue is whether two Massachusetts regulations limiting the prescribing and handling of ZohydroTM ER ("Zohydro"), a Food and Drug Administration-approved opioid analgesic, frustrate federal statutory objectives in violation of the Supremacy Clause of the United States Constitution. Plaintiff Zogenix, Inc., believes they do and moves for a preliminary injunction barring their enforcement (Docket # 46). Defendants, Commonwealth health officials sued in their official capacities, believe they do not and move to dismiss (Docket # 44). Plaintiff's motion is ALLOWED IN PART and DENIED IN PART. Defendants' motion is DENIED.
On October 25, 2013, the Food and Drug Administration ("FDA") approved Zohydro, the only opioid analgesic whose sole active ingredient is hydrocodone. Unlike other hydrocodone analgesics, Zohydro does not contain acetaminophen, which may cause liver damage. As an "extended release" medication, Zohydro dispenses pain relief over a twelve-hour period. The drug, however, lacks an "abuse resistant formulation," permitting individuals to crush the pills, inhale or inject them, and immediately experience the full effect. Some Massachusetts officials worried that Zohydro could cause or worsen opioid abuse in the Commonwealth.
Governor Patrick authorized, and the Department of Public Health ("DPH") issued, an emergency order which banned the prescribing, ordering, dispensing, or administration of Zohydro. Plaintiff sued and sought a preliminary injunction on the ground that federal law preempted the emergency order. I agreed, and on April 15, 2014, enjoined enforcement of DPH's emergency order. I stayed the preliminary injunction until April 22, 2014.
On that day, the Board of Registration in Medicine ("BORIM") promulgated an emergency regulation requiring an individually licensed prescriber to do the following before prescribing Zohydro
243 CMR 2.07(25) (emphasis added).
On May 6, 2014, the Board of Registration in Pharmacy ("BORIP") promulgated two Zohydro-related regulations. The first states that "[a] certified pharmacy technician, pharmacy technician, pharmacy technician trainee, or pharmacy intern may not handle [Zohydro]." 247 CMR 8.05(3). The second contains a host of prerequisites a pharmacist must satisfy before dispensing Zohydro, including: (1) storing Zohydro in a locked cabinet; (2) dispensing Zohydro in a container with a child-proof safety cap; (3) reviewing the Letter of Medical Necessity; (4) including a warning about Zohydro's dangers; (5) providing counseling on various issues; and (6) checking the patient's history on the Prescription Monitoring Program.
On May 8, 2014, the Board of Registration of Physicians Assistants ("BOROPA") promulgated a set of regulations identical to the ones BORIM passed. 263 CMR 5.07(12).
To obtain a preliminary injunction, Zogenix must establish that (1) it is likely to succeed on the merits; (2) it is likely to suffer irreparable harm in the absence of preliminary injunctive relief; (3) the balance of equities weighs in its favor; and (4) an injunction is in the public interest.
A complaint must contain a "short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief." Fed. R. Civ. P. 8(a)(2). The court accepts as true all factual allegations contained in the complaint, but not legal conclusions.
Zogenix challenges the Commonwealth regulations which require that (1) doctors or physician assistants certify in the Letter of Medical Necessity ("LMN") that "other pain management treatments have failed,"
The Supremacy Clause gives Congress the power to preempt state law. U.S. Const. art. VI cl. 2. There are different types of preemption. At issue here is "obstacle preemption," which occurs when, "under the circumstances of [the] particular case, [the challenged state law] stands as an obstacle to the accomplishment and execution of the full purposes and objectives of Congress."
The Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act ("FDCA"), 21 U.S.C. §§ 301-399f, sets forth the pertinent federal purposes and objectives. The FDCA created the FDA and required it to "protect the public health" by ensuring that "drugs are safe and effective." 21 U.S.C. § 393(b)(2)(B). The FDA must approve new drugs before they are introduced to the market.
The essence of plaintiff's preemption argument is that defendants are trying to make scarce or altogether unavailable a drug that the FDA, by approving it, has said should be available. First, they contend the regulations amount to a de facto ban on Zohydro. The LMN requirement that "other pain management treatments have failed" requires a physician to cycle a patient through unnecessary and possibly dangerous pain management alternatives before prescribing Zohydro. And the "pharmacist-only" regulation is incompatible with the staffing structure of many pharmacies, making it impracticable for pharmacies to carry Zohydro. If physicians cannot readily prescribe Zohdryo and pharmacies will not stock it, then Zohydro is not, as the FDA required, available to the public. Second, it claims that federal law preempts the regulations even if they do not functionally ban Zohydro. The FDA approved Zohydro for "management of pain severe enough to require daily, around-the-clock, long-term opioid treatment and for which alternative treatment options are inadequate." Docket # 49-1 at 29. The alternative treatment options must only be inadequate; they need not have been tried and failed, as the Commonwealth's regulation requires. The regulation thus undermines the FDA's power to approve drugs for specific uses and purposes.
Defendants see it differently. The "LMN regulation" does not refer to any particular treatments that must fail. The regulation does not require physicians to prescribe other opioids or subject patients to medically ill-advised treatments before prescribing Zohydro. Mem. in Supp. of Mot. to Dismiss, Docket # 45, at 12 n.12. The regulation gives physicians far more flexibility than plaintiff is willing to admit. Zohydro will thus remain available, and the regulations are permissible. Furthermore, state governments have primary authority to regulate health and safety, including the practice of medical professionals. The FDA itself has recognized that it "does not generally regulate the practice of pharmacy or the practice of medicine — the States traditionally have regulated both the prescribing and dispensing of drugs."
Sure enough, the Commonweath's police powers permit it to regulate the administration of drugs by the health professions.
By any reckoning, the text of the "LMN regulation" is ambiguous. Exactly what "pain management treatments" must fail before a doctor may prescribe Zohydro? Plaintiff believes other opioids must fail. Defendants do not believe a physician must prescribe other opioids before she may prescribe Zohydro. One need look no further than defendants' own affiant to doubt their position. The affidavit of Dr. Jane Liebschutz, Associate Chief of General Internal Medicine at Boston Medical Center, states the following:
Of course, this may be one doctor's opinion. But if the Commonwealth interprets its regulation to make Zohydro a last-resort opioid, it undeniably makes Zohydro less available. That presents a constitutional problem.
The "LMN regulation" is unclear in another way. How long ago must the "other pain management treatments" have failed? As a Schedule II drug, Zohydro prescriptions are subject to a thirty-day maximum. Sec. Am. Compl., Docket # 51, ¶ 48. Must a physician try a new treatment—or, because it is plural in the regulation, treatments—before writing each new prescription, or may she rely upon a failed treatment in the more distant past? If she may, how distant? For example, if a physician had prescribed a different opioid six months ago with no success, could she write a prescription for Zohydro and still comply with the "LMN regulation?" Could a fellow physician rely on a failed regimen of vitamins and acupuncture two months ago? What, indeed, does "failure" mean in this context? The regulation has no response to these rather obvious contingencies. If the Commonwealth interpreted its regulation to require a fresh failure as a precondition to each 30-day Zohydro prescription, it would severely frustrate Zohydro's availability and pose significant constitutional concerns.
As for the "pharmacist-only regulation," the parties rely on competing affidavits. In a sealed declaration, Zogenix co-founder and Chief Executive Officer Roger L. Hawley discloses that unspecified major retail pharmacy chains do not plan to stock Zohydro because the "pharmacist-only regulation" is "fundamentally incompatible with personnel infrastructure and established policies for dispensing ER/LA opioids." Declaration of Roger L. Hawley ¶ 3. Defendants present the affidavit of Michael Reppucci, R. Ph., owner of and pharmacist at Inman Pharmacy in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Docket # 56-6. Reppucci states that because BORIP already regulates pharmacy technicians, "prohibiting any pharmacy technicians from transporting and handling Zohydro does not add any substantial administrative burden or present substantial logistical problems."
What is the proper remedy given such uncertainty? Defendants may interpret and enforce the challenged regulations in a way that obstructs the FDCA's objectives. At present, however, given the lack of a record of enforcement, it is unclear whether such an obstacle exists. The Supreme Court has reminded lower courts that they should not find preemption where there is no clearly discernible conflict between state and federal law.
With these principles in mind, I conclude as follows:
Plaintiff's motion for a preliminary injunction (Docket # 46) is ALLOWED IN PART and DENIED IN PART without prejudice. Defendants' motion to dismiss (Docket # 44) is DENIED without prejudice.