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Cough-cold rewind: 20 years of growth

2/18/2014

This year, ECRM celebrates 20 years of successfully pairing buyers and sellers across the consumer packaged goods industry. As part of that celebration, and in correlation to the ECRM Cough-Cold, Analgesics and Allergy event, DSN editors thought it’d be a good idea to look back through the last 20 years of the cough-cold business at retail.


In that time, the sales of cough-cold/allergy tablets and liquids have grown from a $2.4 billion base into a $5.4 billion category. What follows is a review of the big product launches and trends that have driven the cough-cold category over the last two decades.



1995-1999


•    In what has since become a case study in how to successfully obtain consumer impressions without breaking the bank, CNS placed Breathe Right on the map with a super-endorsement by NFL players participating in Super Bowl XXIX in 1995. “Eight of the game’s 10 touchdowns were scored by players wearing the device,” wrote DSN’s Mike Troy. “Close-ups of the 49ers’ Jerry Rice and Ricky Watters and the Chargers’ Natrone Means, all of whom wore a Breathe Right strip, were shown repeatedly to millions of viewers.” The nasal strip that helps open nasal passages for better breathing was sent to NFL team trainers to sample as part of its launch strategy, and the rest

is history.


•    McNeil Consumer’s nasal spray Nasalcrom (today managed by Prestige Brands) is approved for OTC status on Jan. 6, 1997, marking the first time an inhaled anti-inflammatory drug is approved for OTC, and the first time an OTC product can claim to prevent allergy symptoms.


•    Zinc is heralded by the consumer press as a cough-cold wonder drug that is clinically proven to shorten the duration and severity of the common cold. The hubbub created out-of-stocks as consumers clamored for such successful zinc products as Gel Tech’s Zicam (today managed by Matrixx) and Quigley’s (now ProPhase Labs) Cold-Eeze.


2000-2004


•    Such homeopathic companies as Hyland’s begin targeting the mass allergy market with product launches, including Hyland’s Sinus. Allergy was one of the first categories in which retailers merchandised homeopathic remedies alongside allopathic medicines.


•    Retailers also begin carving out children’s cough-cold as a destination within the set. “Children are a viable market because it has not been tapped,” reported Barbara Kuhn, then assistant VP merchandising at Happy Harry’s, in September 2000. The new focus corresponded to a number of new product launches, including Children’s Motrin Cold and Dimetapp Get Better Bear freezer pops.


•    The cough-cold category was rocked by the removal of phenylpropanolamine-containing products from shelves in October 2000. PPA had been on the market as a decongestant for about 50 years prior. The Food and Drug Administration asked manufacturers to voluntarily remove the ingredient from the market because of an increased risk of hemorrhagic stroke in women.


•    A pair of Food and Drug Administration advisory committees recommended the Rx-to-OTC switch of three second-generation antihistamines — Claritin, Allegra and Zyrtec — on May 11, 2001. The genesis of the switch application was a Citizen’s Petition filed by Wellpoint Health Networks of California.


•    In December 2002, Schering-Plough (now Merck) switched Claritin (loratadine) to over-the-counter. It marked the first second-generation antihistamine to make the crossover and brought with it an approximately $2.6 billion book of business from Rx to OTC aisles. It was also one of the first switches that caused healthcare payers to move the remaining Rx-only antihistamines to non-preferred status in an effort to encourage patients to self-treat their allergies.


•    Oklahoma passes bellwether legislation that restricted the sale of products containing pseudoephedrine to behind the pharmacy counter in April 2004.


2005-2009


•    Adams Respiratory made a splash onto drug store shelves with its “stealth switch” of the guaifenesin product Mucinex (now managed by Reckitt Benckiser). Adams officially applied for the rights to market extended-release guaifenesin as an OTC product and won market exclusivity — forcing many guaifenesin products off the market. The brand then took advantage of its market exclusivity with a successful ad campaign that brought Mrs. Mucus into America’s lexicon.


•    The power of Oprah at the OTC shelf was realized when she mentioned Knight-McDowell’s Airborne (now managed by Reckitt Benckiser). “The appearance on ‘Oprah’ certainly contributed to the brand’s phenomenal growth over the first half of this year’s cough-cold season — up 254.5% to reach drug channel sales of $10 million for the 12 weeks ended Jan. 23, [2005], according to IRI,” wrote DSN on March 7, 2005.


•    The summer of 2005 saw PSE-containing products restricted for sale behind the pharmacy counter. What’s more, pharmacists were responsible for enforcing restrictions on the amount of PSE that can be purchased in any given month. Since then, the Consumer Healthcare Products Association has helped build the National Precursor Log Exchange, enabling pharmacies to electronically track the sale of PSE products in realtime in those 29 states where NPLEx operates.


•    Oregon passes legislation identifying PSE-containing products as prescription-only in what amounts to a reverse switch. Mississippi has since passed similar legislation.


•    CHPA begins proactively disseminating “toolkits” regarding the teenage abuse potential of dextromethorphan. In addition to getting all stakeholders — parents, teachers and healthcare providers, along with the teens themselves — in on the conversation, the association advocates an age restriction ban on the sale of DXM-containing products to adults 18 years and older.


•    In October 2007 the FDA begins exploring the safety of several cough-cold ingredients in children. At issue was the lack of pharmacokinetic studies in pediatric populations to determine appropriate dosage limits. The industry has since voluntarily changed cough-cold labels to direct parents to seek a doctor’s advice for children under the age of 4 years. The questioning of safety and efficacy in kids cough-cold products gives a big boost to homeopathic alternatives.


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