Table of Contents
WARREN, N.J. — The Food and Drug Administration has approved Voltaren Arthritis Pain as an over-the-counter remedy for arthritis pain, GlaxoSmithKline said Tuesday. With the FDA’s approval, Voltaren Arthritis Pain becomes the first and only prescription strength, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory (NSAID) topical gel for arthritis pain available O-T-C in the United States.
Voltaren Gel, which GSK Consumer Healthcare owns the rights to, is currently only available with a prescription in the US. Today’s O-T-C approval of Voltaren Arthritis Pain (diclofenac sodium topical gel, 1%, NSAID, arthritis pain reliever) will provide the nearly 30 million Americans with osteoarthritis over-the-counter access to this topical treatment option.
“For the millions of people around the world living with arthritis, joint pain and stiffness are daily realities,” said Franck Riot, head of R&D, GSK Consumer Healthcare said. “At GSK, we are committed to improving the quality of life of these people and today’s approval is progress towards this, providing consumers in the US with increased access to an effective, proven arthritis pain relief option. Voltaren is currently the number 1 O-T-C topical pain relief brand globally, and we look forward to expanding its availability in the US.”
Dr. Roy Altman, Professor of Medicine in Rheumatology at UCLA added: “Osteoarthritis treatment guidelines from several international and United States medical societies, including the 2019 American College of Rheumatology (ACR) endorse the early use of topical NSAIDs for treating arthritis pain of the knee and hand. In contrast to prior guidelines, the recommendations are inclusive of all age groups, not just the elderly.”
In addition, the Osteoarthritis Research Society International (OARSI) recently updated and expanded their guidelines for non-surgical management of OA by developing patient-focused treatment recommendations. These updated guidelines strongly recommend topical non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) for individuals with knee OA. Of the non-core interventions assessed as part of this guideline update, topical NSAIDs were recommended more strongly than all oral analgesics due to favorable balance of consistent efficacy and minor transient side effects.