cold tablets, containing:
salicylamide, phenacetin grs.,
pyrilamine maleate, caffeine,
ephedrine sulphate,
magnesium hydroxide, and
aluminum hydroxide complex (U.S. Pat. 2,446,981). That patent number is from 1948; these tablets would have been made shortly thereafter.
Medical Phenacetin was widely used until the third quarter of the twentieth century, often in the form of an A.P.C., or "
aspirin-phenacetin-
caffeine"
compound analgesic, as a remedy for fever and pain. An early formulation (1919) was
Vincent's APC in Australia. In the United States, the
Food and Drug Administration ordered the withdrawal of drugs containing phenacetin in November 1983, due to its
carcinogenic and kidney-damaging properties. It was also banned in India. As a result, some branded, and previously phenacetin-based, preparations continued to be sold, but with the phenacetin replaced by safer alternatives. A popular brand of phenacetin was
Roche's
Saridon, which was reformulated in 1983 to contain
propyphenazone,
paracetamol and
caffeine.
Coricidin was also reformulated without phenacetin. Paracetamol is a metabolite of phenacetin with similar analgesic and antipyretic effects, but the new formulation has not been found to have phenacetin's carcinogenicity.
Other Phenacetin has been used as a
cutting agent to adulterate
cocaine in the UK and Canada, due to the similar physical properties. There, it has been given the nickname "magic". Due to its low cost, phenacetin is used for research into the physical and refractive properties of crystals. It is an ideal compound for this type of research. In Canada, phenacetin is used as a laboratory reagent, and in a few hair dye preparations (as a stabilizer for hydrogen peroxide). While it is considered a prescription drug, no marketed drugs contain phenacetin. ==Safety==