FDA Soon To Issue Guides On Tracking/Tracing Drugs

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Posted on 13th March 2010 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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It may have taken three years since the heparin-contamination tragedy, but the Food and Drug Administration is apparently close to issuing its guidance for the tracking and tracing of medicines. http://www.securingpharma.com/40/articles/403.php

Joshua Sharfstein, FDA deputy commissioner, said Thursday that the guidance will set “a standard for unique identification for prescription drug packages, which ultimately will help in identifying the whereabouts and authenticity of drug packages and distinguish them from counterfeits.”

He made his remarks before a House Energy and Commerce health subcommittee meeting, which was called “Drug Safety: An Update From The FDA.”

Coming up with a better system of tracking drugs is crucial, especially when about 80 percent of all active pharmaceutical ingredients used by U.S. drug makers come from overseas, according to a 1998 U.S. General Accounting Office study.

During his testimony, Sharfstein claimed that the FDA has made great progress beefing up the oversight of foreign-made drug ingredients that are coming into the United States, For example, it has opened offices in several countries and now has information-sharing deals with foreign regulatory agencies.

Sharfstein also cited the calamity involving Chinese-made heparin, which he said caused the deaths at least 80 Americans, during his comments to the subcommittee.


Attorney Gordon Johnson
Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

http://subtlebraininjury.com :: http://brainanatomyguide.com :: http://car-accident-rain.com :: http://tbilaw.com
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INSIDE WASHINGTON: Is the FDA a broken agency?

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Posted on 3rd March 2009 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 3/3/2009

EDITOR’S NOTE — An occasional look at how Washington works — or doesn’t.
By RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR and MIKE BAKER
Associated Press Writers

WASHINGTON (AP) — Tainted peanuts. Unsterilized syringes. Salmonella in Mexican chili peppers. A contaminated blood thinner from China that sent patients into life-threatening shock.

Every few months, the Food and Drug Administration goes into fire-brigade mode, rushing to get control over another safety crisis. The agency that regulates products worth 25 cents of every dollar spent by U.S. consumers seems overwhelmed by its own mission.

Some say the FDA is broken, and others want to break it up — by moving food safety to a new office.

“You’ve got an agency that quite frankly is either non-functional, or dysfunctional, or maybe all of the above,” said Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich., who as the longest serving member of Congress has investigated many agencies, including the FDA.

“Bet yourself a new hat or a fine dinner that you are going to have a scandal a month,” Dingell added. “They are running around like a lot of headless chickens.”

Others, even some critics, see tentative improvements. Many defenders acknowledge the FDA is struggling.

“‘Broken’ is the kind of word that’s sort of a fighting word,” said Dr. Frank Torti, the cancer researcher serving as acting FDA commissioner. “We have recognized for a long time that more is needed. Because of a lack of (legal) authorities and inadequate resources, it’s really hard to do the job.”

Restoring the FDA’s reputation will be a major challenge for an Obama administration that strode into town promising competent government.

The decline didn’t happen overnight. There’s no single, simple cause. In 2007, an independent group of science advisers concluded that the FDA was in danger of failing in its mission. “American lives are at risk,” said their report. It wasn’t the first alarm.

As the pharmaceutical and food industries went global in recent years, the FDA fell behind on inspections. Its legal powers failed to keep up with fast-changing industries. Its own scientists said it grew too cozy with drug companies and tuned out signals of safety problems.

Money for research grew scarce. The agency struggled to answer such seemingly simple questions as how far from a cow pasture a farmer should plant his spinach patch to keep out bad germs. Internal computer systems were allowed to decay, although they are essential to monitoring drug safety trends or blocking shady imports.

The FDA drifted. During the Bush administration, it went long periods without a permanent commissioner who could be an advocate before Congress. Lawmakers piled new responsibilities on the agency, often without the funds to carry them out.

This past year’s safety problems — homegrown and imported — illustrate the FDA’s weakness.

Last winter, heparin from China contaminated by a mysterious ingredient prompted an international recall. The blood thinner, used to treat people during heart surgery and kidney dialysis, was triggering life-threatening allergic reactions.

Summer brought a salmonella outbreak blamed first on tomatoes, and later on hot peppers as well.

This winter, it was salmonella again, in peanut products. A small company’s apparent disregard for basic sanitation led to the recall of more than 2,800 foods that used its ingredients.

More than 2,100 people were sickened in these incidents. At least nine deaths have been blamed on tainted peanuts alone.

Last week, another problem surfaced. Federal prosecutors in North Carolina obtained guilty pleas from two employees of AM2PAT, a company that manufactured syringes in unsterile conditions and covered it up with phony paperwork.

Prosecutors say hundreds of patients were sickened and five died. The FBI is looking for the company’s owner, who may have fled the country.

Different products were involved in the incidents, but some of the same FDA shortcomings: inspections, legal authority and technology.

The pharmaceutical plant in China that made the heparin was never inspected by the FDA, partly because the agency confused its name with a similar name belonging to another factory. It was unclear how many foreign drug facilities fall under the FDA’s jurisdiction because one government database lists about 7,000 and another, 3,000.

Sending inspectors to China used to involve first waiting for permission from the Chinese government. The situation has improved, under a U.S.-China agreement that led to the opening of FDA offices there.

The tomato outbreak last summer underscored other kinds of gaps. Produce companies are not required to have a food safety plan. And the FDA lacks legal authority to require a system for tracing foods back to the farm. Investigators had to sift through piles of paper records as losses mounted for tomato growers. Dingell said the FDA looked like the Keystone Kops.

In the peanut butter outbreak, the FDA has been slowed because of the length of time it takes to identify positively a strain of salmonella. The agency wants to replace current lab tests that can take a week or more with technology that cuts the wait to a day or two.

FDA inspectors quickly descended on the small Georgia facility at the center of the peanut outbreak. But they didn’t get the whole story immediately. The FDA had to invoke bioterror laws to get lab reports that ultimately showed the company shipped tainted peanuts. Meantime, the agency had no authority to order a food recall.

“The FDA has been trying to do so much with so little for so long that they really have lost the vision of what would make an effective food safety program,” said Caroline Smith DeWaal, food safety director for the Center for Science in the Public Interest, which wants to set up a separate food agency.

Congress has been pumping more money into the FDA the last couple of years. And the Obama administration seems willing to consider big changes, especially on food safety.

The two leading candidates for FDA commissioner are physicians from outside the agency. One is Baltimore health commissioner Joshua Sharfstein, a pediatrician who has taken on the FDA over risks in children’s cough and cold drugs. The other is Margaret Hamburg, a bioterrorism expert who served in the Clinton administration and as New York’s health commissioner.

“One area where we could see bipartisan cooperation might be the strengthening of the FDA,” said Dr. Paul Stolley, a former department head at the University of Maryland medical center who had a stint as a visiting scientist at the FDA. “I don’t think ideological differences should interfere.”

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Baker reported from Raleigh, N.C.

___

On the Net:

FDA Science Board report — http://tinyurl.com/yvnk28

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.


Attorney Gordon Johnson
Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

http://subtlebraininjury.com :: http://brainanatomyguide.com :: http://car-accident-rain.com :: http://tbilaw.com
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FDA warned syringe producer of serious problems

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Posted on 26th February 2009 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 2/26/2009 3:32 PM

By MIKE BAKER
Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Federal regulators warned a syringe manufacturer of “several significant violations” in its quality control system two years before its needles triggered an outbreak of bacterial infections that prosecutors say led to at least five deaths and hundreds of illnesses.

A U.S. Food and Drug Administration warning letter, made public Thursday by the agency, cited AM2PAT Inc. in August 2005 for nine serious violations at its factory in Raleigh, where it made syringes of heparin and saline to flush IV lines.

The company, which was incorporated in Chicago, later moved its manufacturing to Angier, about 20 miles south of Raleigh.

Among the problems at the Raleigh factory, the letter noted poor documentation of sterility tests, insufficient efforts to maintain a sterile environment and unqualified workers. Each of those issues were cited again this month as prosecutors won guilty pleas from two former AM2PAT employees and charged former CEO Dushyant Patel.

Authorities are searching for Patel, who may have fled to his native India. Prosecutors do not know if he has an attorney. He faces up to 95 years in prison if convicted on 10 charges including fraud, false statements and selling adulterated medical devices.

The 2005 warning letter said the failure to establish and maintain procedures to control the environment “could reasonably be expected to have an adverse effect on product quality.” It said the company’s written quality control procedures were “obsolete” and there was no sign workers had been properly trained.

“Evidence of improperly trained personnel included an employee chewing gum while filling syringes and an employee improperly gowning during sterility testing,” the warning letter stated.

Those issues apparently lingered. Prosecutors have said that the company’s “microbiologist” was a teenager who had dropped out of high school. Photographs introduced as evidence show a “clean room” with a window fan patched with duct tape. Others show paint chipping off the facility’s floor and syringes piled high on a table.

But the criminal case particularly focuses on how the company documented its shipments. Prosecutors contend the company was so consumed with maximizing profit that it shipped syringes without testing to ensure it they were sterile, and then later backdated paperwork to make it look as if the company had followed procedure.

AM2PAT vowed in 2005 to correct its deficiencies, according to the warning letter, and the FDA said a follow-up inspection in January 2006 was satisfactory.

On Wednesday, the FDA said the next inspection didn’t take place until December 2007, and court documents show it didn’t happen until after the Centers for Disease Control reported an outbreak of illness connected to AM2PAT syringes. Prosecutors say the product killed five and sickened up to 300 others, with some of the illnesses resulting in spinal meningitis and permanent brain damage.

On Thursday, the FDA said it discovered it also conducted an inspection in August 2007, after the company moved to Angier, and found only a labeling problem.

But that month, the FDA started receiving reports of dirty syringes. Some reported “orange specks” floating inside the unopened syringes, while others reported “yellow sediment” or “muddy brown” syringes filled with floating white specks.

The FDA has declined to release its inspection reports, saying they are only available through a Freedom of Information Act request, which is pending.

Plant manager Aniruddha Patel, 43, of Carpentersville, Ill., and quality control director Ravindra Kumar Sharma, 54, of Richmond, Va., each were sentenced Monday in U.S. District Court in Raleigh to 4 1/2 years in prison for fraud and allowing tainted drugs into the marketplace.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.


Attorney Gordon Johnson
Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

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Feds searching for CEO in case of tainted syringes

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Posted on 24th February 2009 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 2/24/2009

By MIKE BAKER
Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — For months, prosecutors say, technicians in the gloom of a run-down North Carolina plant prepared life-sustaining syringes and shipped them before ensuring they were sterile.

Investigators believe a rush to maximize profits led Dushyant Patel’s AM2PAT Inc. to produce heparin and saline syringes that killed five people and sickened hundreds of others, some resulting in spinal meningitis and permanent brain damage. Authorities are now on an international search for Patel after he was indicted last week on 10 charges including fraud, false statements and selling adulterated medical devices.

U.S. Attorney George Holding said Tuesday that authorities believe Patel has fled to his native India and have turned to Interpol for cross-border aid in catching up to him.

“Our office is committed to pursuing him and bringing him here to account for his actions,” Holding said.

Court documents portray a disturbing recklessness that allowed syringes to ship before they were checked for contamination. Reports detailing the testing were backdated to appear they passed procedure before shipping, and some test results were manipulated or fabricated to deceive inspectors from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, prosecutors said.

Patel’s company sold nearly $7 million worth of heparin, a blood thinner, and saline syringes in 2006-07. The plant in Angier, about 20 miles south of Raleigh, cut corners so it could maximize profit, including shipping products quickly without checking on safety, according to court documents.

The syringes were recalled in December 2007 after an outbreak of illnesses. Health inspectors identified bacterial infections in Colorado, Texas, Illinois and Florida and traced the contamination to AM2PAT.

It’s a similar disregard for consumer health that congressional leaders portrayed in the salmonella outbreak traced to products from a Georgia peanut plant that sickened 600 people and may have contributed to nine deaths. Company e-mails released by a U.S. House committee showed Peanut Corp. of America owner Stewart Parnell ordered products tainted with the bacteria to be shipped because he was worried about lost sales. Parnell has not been charged, but federal officials are investigating.

Ned Feder, a staff scientist at the Washington-based nonprofit Project On Government Oversight, said the FDA must rely to some extent on the honesty of plants, but that the agency also needs to verify the paperwork companies produce. The FDA doesn’t inspect often enough, largely because it is short on staff, he said.

“You hardly turn around and the FDA is breaking news,” Feder said. “If it isn’t peanuts in Georgia, it’s syringes in North Carolina. They’re completely different (cases), but they can both be traced back to the fact that the FDA doesn’t have the manpower to do the policing it needs to do.”

FDA spokeswoman Siobhan DeLancey declined to immediately discuss the syringe case. She acknowledged that it’s impossible for inspectors to be in every plant at once but said the FDA performs regular checks.

Several people have sued since the fallout of the tainted syringe case, and prosecutors still aren’t sure exactly how many were affected by it. Heparin and saline are used to flush intravenous lines during cancer treatments, kidney dialysis and other procedures.

“One of the worst things about this case is that the people who were taking saline and heparin, they’re usually sick already or have some debilitative illness and need these medicines to try to get well,” Holding said. “Sometimes it’s hard to determine whether they were killed from the tainted heparin or whether it was the original illness. We’re not able to say any more than five.”

AM2PAT was incorporated in Chicago, where Patel lived, but had its only plant in North Carolina.

Patel said about a year ago when federal officials were investigating the sicknesses that his company voluntarily recalled the syringes in question and there was “nothing out there anymore.” Prosecutors do not know if Patel still has an attorney. He faces up to 95 years in prison, if convicted.

Plant manager Aniruddha Patel, 43, of Carpentersville, Ill., and quality control director Ravindra Kumar Sharma, 54, of Richmond, Va., each were sentenced Monday in U.S. District Court in Raleigh to 4½ years in prison for fraud and allowing tainted drugs into the marketplace.

___

Associated Press Writer Estes Thompson contributed to this report.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.


Attorney Gordon Johnson
Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

http://subtlebraininjury.com :: http://brainanatomyguide.com :: http://car-accident-rain.com :: http://tbilaw.com
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Prosecutors: NC company shipped tainted syringes

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Posted on 24th February 2009 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 2/24/2009

By MIKE BAKER
Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — A North Carolina company is accused of bypassing sterilization tests for medical syringes in a cost-cutting move prosecutors say sickened hundreds of patients and led to five deaths.

U.S. Attorney George Holding said Tuesday that federal authorities have launched an international search for the executive charged with rushing shipments of bacteria contaminated syringes from an AM2PAT Inc. plant. Two former plant workers who provided prosecutors details about the plant’s operations have pleaded guilty for their roles in shipping tainted syringes.

The syringes contained Heparin, a blood thinner, and saline, and were recalled in December 2007 after an outbreak of illnesses. Health inspectors identified bacterial infections in Colorado, Texas, Illinois and Florida.

Heparin and saline are used to flush intravenous lines during cancer treatments, kidney dialysis and other procedures.

The U.S. attorney said investigators believe AM2PAT CEO Dushyant Patel has fled to his native India. Patel was indicted last week on 10 charges including fraud, false statements and selling adulterated medical devices.

“Our office is committed to pursuing him and bringing him here to account for his actions,” Holding said. “We’re putting all resources available to bringing him back here.”

Holder did not know who Patel’s attorney was.

AM2PAT is based in Chicago and had a subsidiary in North Carolina.

Patel’s company sold nearly $7 million worth of heparin and saline syringes in 2006-07. Prosecutors said the facility in Angier, about 20 miles south of Raleigh, cut corners and failed to follow rules for checking sterility. They also said manufacturing dates were falsified to make it appear that safeguards were followed.

The scheme led to bacterial infections in 200 to 300 patients around the country, some of them resulting in spinal meningitis and permanent brain damages, prosecutors said. Even more people may have become infected.

“One of the worst things about this case is that the people who were taking saline and heparin, they’re usually sick already or have some debilitative illness and need these medicines to try to get well,” Holding said. “Sometimes its hard to determine whether they were killed from the tainted heparin or whether it was the original illness. We’re not able to say any more than five.”

Patel said about a year ago when federal officials were investigating the outbreak that company voluntarily recalled the implicated syringes and there was “nothing out there anymore.”

Plant manager Aniruddha Patel, 43, of Carpentersville, Ill., and quality control director Ravindra Kumar Sharma, 54, of Richmond, Va., each were sentenced Monday in U.S. District Court in Raleigh to 4½ years in prison for fraud and allowing tainted drugs into the marketplace.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.


Attorney Gordon Johnson
Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

http://subtlebraininjury.com :: http://brainanatomyguide.com :: http://car-accident-rain.com :: http://tbilaw.com
http://waiting.com :: http://vestibulardisorder.com :: http://youtube.com/profile?user=braininjuryattorney