Journavx for Pain Management: Toward Affordability and Access

By Rene Pretorius

April 25, 2025

In this review I summarize the ICER 2025 evaluation report of suzetrigine (Journavx®), a new FDA-approved non-opioid oral analgesic. It targets the NaV1.8 sodium channel for moderate-to-severe acute pain. Clinical trials show suzetrigine reduces post-surgical pain better than placebo. It also matches low-dose opioids in pain relief but with fewer side effects like nausea and constipation. Economic modeling suggests Journavx for pain may save costs by lowering opioid use disorder (OUD) risk. Understanding its role in pain management is key for better outcomes.

 

Background Context  

  • Acute pain affects ~80 million U.S. patients yearly. Current treatments rely on opioids and NSAIDs, which carry risks like addiction and organ damage.
  • OUD is a public health crisis. In 2022, ~108,000 opioid overdose deaths occurred in the U.S., with 15,000 linked to prescription opioids. The economic cost is tens of billions annually.
  • CDC guidelines recommend nonopioid therapies for acute pain. However, safe and effective alternatives are lacking.
  • NaV1.8 is a sodium channel in peripheral nerves. It’s a promising target for pain relief without opioid-like CNS effects.
  • The FDA approved Journavx for pain in January 2025. It’s the first novel nonopioid analgesic in over 20 years.

 

Key Insights Driving Suzetrigine´s Value

  • Suzetrigine significantly reduced pain more than placebo in post-bunionectomy and abdominoplasty patients. It provided faster relief, especially in abdominoplasty (~2 hours vs. 8 hours for placebo).
  • Compared to hydrocodone/acetaminophen (HB5/APAP325), suzetrigine had similar pain reduction. However, opioids worked faster in bunionectomy cases.
  • The safety profile is favorable. Adverse events were mostly mild or moderate. Suzetrigine caused less nausea and vomiting than opioids. No respiratory depression or sedation was reported. Long-term safety remains uncertain due to limited trial duration.
  • Network meta-analysis suggests suzetrigine matches higher-dose opioids and NSAIDs in efficacy. However, wide confidence intervals indicate uncertainty.
  • Economic modeling estimates suzetrigine as cost-saving compared to HB/APAP for one-week treatment. This is due to averting OUD cases, assuming a 0.43% OUD incidence after short opioid use.
  • At $232.50 per week, suzetrigine’s budget impact is manageable for healthcare systems.
  • Stakeholders stress expanding access to multimodal pain management. They also highlight health equity concerns and the need for more research, including direct comparisons with NSAIDs.

 

Implications for Health Economics and Outcomes Research

  • Suzetrigine could reduce opioid prescriptions, lowering OUD incidence and associated costs.
  • Economic models suggest substituting opioids with suzetrigine may be cost-saving. Real-world data will refine these estimates.
  • Improved access to suzetrigine may address pain management disparities, especially for underserved groups.
  • Payers must balance coverage policies to ensure access while managing costs. Step therapy may not suit acute pain due to the need for rapid relief.
  • Future research should compare suzetrigine to high-dose NSAIDs and study high-risk populations.
  • Clinicians should update guidelines to include suzetrigine and promote multimodal pain management.

This summary is based on the ICER 2025 final report and integrates clinical, economic, and policy contexts.

Reference url

Recent Posts

Paving the Way for Digital Health Technologies: NICE’s Bold New Strategy for the NHS

By HEOR Staff Writer

October 9, 2025

The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) is expanding its technology appraisals programme, and starting April 2026, this will include digital health technologies that are placed on an equal legal footing with medicines in the NHS. This initiative forms part of the NHS 10-year ...
Lurbinectedin SCLC Therapy: FDA Approval and Its Economic Implications

By João L. Carapinha

October 6, 2025

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has recently approved lurbinectedin SCLC therapy in combination with atezolizumab, or with atezolizumab and hyaluronidase-qvfc, for the treatment of adult patients with extensive-stage small cell lung cancer (ES-SCLC). This regulatory decision reflects ...
Transforming Healthcare with the Gene Therapy Access Model

By HEOR Staff Writer

October 1, 2025

The gene therapy access model is a groundbreaking federal-state collaborative framework designed to improve how transformative treatments are distributed and financed, particularly within Medicaid. This innovative approach answers a key question for patients and policymakers: How can we ensur...