Anaphylaxis8 min readPublished 16 May 2026

Neffy: the first needle-free epinephrine, explained.

For decades, the conversation about anaphylaxis preparedness has revolved around a single device with a needle. A nasal spray version of epinephrine changes who carries it, how reliably it gets used, and how that conversation goes in our clinic.

Epinephrine has been the first-line treatment for anaphylaxis for more than a century. The medication is well understood, generic, and inexpensive. The problem has never been the drug. The problem has always been getting it into the body fast enough — and the dominant solution, the spring-loaded intramuscular auto-injector, comes with a stubborn list of barriers that we see in clinic every week.

The list goes like this. Needles frighten a meaningful subset of patients and caregivers. Auto-injectors are bulky enough that teenagers leave them at home. Hesitation about "stabbing" a child delays the dose. And a non-trivial number of devices are deployed incorrectly — into a thumb instead of a thigh — under the stress of a real reaction. None of this is the medication's fault. All of it is the delivery system.

Neffy is a single-dose intranasal epinephrine spray approved for the emergency treatment of allergic reactions, including anaphylaxis. It is the first needle-free option for delivering epinephrine in this setting, and it represents a meaningful broadening of how anaphylaxis preparedness can look for the right patient.

How it works

The device resembles a common single-dose nasal spray — a small, pocket-sized unit with one actuation. A patient or caregiver inserts the tip into one nostril and presses the plunger firmly. The spray delivers a fixed dose of epinephrine through the rich vascular bed of the nasal mucosa, where it is absorbed into the bloodstream within minutes.

Pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic studies comparing intranasal Neffy to intramuscular auto-injectors have shown that blood epinephrine levels and physiological response (heart rate, blood pressure) are broadly comparable. In some scenarios, the nasal route has been shown to reach therapeutic levels in a timeframe similar to — or in some patient sub-populations faster than — the intramuscular route, particularly in patients with thicker subcutaneous tissue at the typical thigh injection site.

One actuation delivers a single dose. As with auto-injectors, a second dose can be given (using the second device the patient carries) if symptoms have not improved within five to ten minutes.

Who is a candidate?

Neffy is approved for adults and paediatric patients above a minimum body weight threshold. Specific weight cutoffs and per-age dosing should be confirmed at the time of prescription against the current label; our team reviews this and individual fit at each consultation.

In our clinic, the patients most commonly interested in switching to — or supplementing with — Neffy fall into a few groups:

Where the trade-offs are

Neffy is not a universal upgrade. There are real considerations to weigh:

The clinical conversation

The right question is not "Neffy or EpiPen?" It is "what is the patient most likely to actually use, correctly, in the moment?" For many patients that answer is still an auto-injector. For an increasing share — particularly adolescents, the needle-phobic, and patients whose body habitus makes intramuscular delivery uncertain — the right answer is a nasal spray, often carried alongside an auto-injector as a backup.

The best epinephrine is the one a patient and their caregivers will reach for without hesitation.

At MED1, every anaphylaxis consultation includes a discussion of which device fits the specific patient's life, in-clinic training on whatever they leave with, a written emergency action plan that reflects their device, and follow-up to confirm comfort with technique before the next potential exposure. We handle the prescription, work with the family on insurance coverage, and stay in touch.

Carrying epinephrine is a discipline. Anything that makes that discipline easier to maintain is, in clinical terms, life-saving.

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More from the journal.

Anaphylaxis & the EpiPen — When to Use It
Environmental Allergies & Allergy Shots