Politics & Government

Zephrex-D: Meth-Busting Decongestant Coming Soon to St. Louis Pharmacies

Highland Pharmaceuticals plans to offer Zephrex-D in St. Louis pharmacies by November. The new decongestant reportedly cannot be converted into meth and might not require a prescription.

A new decongestant set for sale in St. Louis area pharmacies in November is touted as meth-resistant and gaining support by area drug agents.Β 

Zephrex-D, manufactured by Maryland Heights based Highland Pharmaceuticals, is a newΒ pseudoephedrine product that police and the drug's maker hope will stop meth cooks in their tracks.

"St. Louis is our test market and it's our opportunity to get some consumer learning and makeΒ sure all of our systems are going to work before we roll out nationally,"Β PaulΒ Hemings,Β with HighlandΒ Pharmaceuticals, tellsΒ Patch. "The reasonΒ we picked St. Louis,Β one we're headquartered here, and two, Missouri has the largest meth problem in the U.S. It's considered 'Meth Capitol U.S.A.' So what better place to start?"Β 

Find out what's happening in Kirkwoodfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

In November, Hemings said the new drug will be available in six or seven counties in the St. Louis metro area only, including St. Louis, St. Charles and Jefferson counties.

"It will hit the St. Louis area in early November. There are national retailersΒ who are carrying this product," Hemings tellsΒ Patch, but he is not releasing the pharmacy names yet.

Find out what's happening in Kirkwoodfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

As it stands today, Zephrex-D will be behind the counter at the pharmacies because of how allΒ pseudoephedrine products are regulated in Missouri. They areΒ required to be behind the pharmacy counter, require and ID to purchase them and there is a limit to how muchΒ can be purchased at aΒ time.Β Some cities and counties also require a prescription to purchase all drugs containing pseudoephedrine. However, Hemings said his company has applied exemptions to those rules through the DEA.Β 

"We don't know if it takes 32 months or six months to get the exemption. We believeΒ we will get the exemption," Hemings said.Β 

The exemption could allow Zethrex-D, and other pseudoephedrineΒ products that areΒ proven to be unable to be converted into meth, to either not require a prescription to purchase or they could even be sold out in the store with otherΒ over-the-counter medications.Β 

AΒ state law is in the works that requires a prescription for pseudoephedrine so cities and countiesΒ don't have to pass individual ordinances.Β The bill would not only make it a statewide law to require people to have a prescription to purchase most pseudoephedrine products, but it would also allow anΒ exemption for some newly developed allergy products, including Zephrex-D, that can't be made intoΒ meth.Β 

The state law would be similar to the St. Charles County ordinance which already has exemption language built into it that saysΒ pseudoephedrineΒ products require a prescription unless it can be demonstrated that the product cannot be converted toΒ meth.Β 

Check back toΒ Kirkwood Patch this weekΒ for a closer look at Zephrex-D, how it works and how it prevents meth cooks from makingΒ methamphetamine.

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