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Showing posts with label Drug Recall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Drug Recall. Show all posts

Sunday, October 3, 2010

Johnson & Johnson, FDA take Heat over 'Phantom Recall'

Associated Press

 
Johnson & Johnson executives and the Food and Drug Administration both shouldered the blame Thursday for a secret recall in which hired contractors quietly bought up defective painkillers to clear them from store shelves.

J&J Chief Executive William Weldon told House lawmakers the company "made a mistake" in conducting the so-called "phantom recall," which is one of a string of problems that have drawn congressional scrutiny

In the same committee hearing, the FDA's deputy commissioner, Dr. Joshua Sharfstein, said his agency should have acted sooner to halt J&J's plan. At the same time, though, he stressed that regulators were not aware of the deceptive nature of the recall.

Sharfstein and Weldon testified before the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, which held its second hearing on J&J's unprecedented spate of recalls. The largest, involving more than 135 million bottles of infants' and children's Tylenol and other medicines, triggered the committee's investigation.

"We recognize that we need to do better, and we will work hard to restore the public's trust and faith in Johnson & Johnson," Weldon told lawmakers.

Democrats and Republicans pressed Weldon on its "phantom" recall involving 88,000 packets of Motrin, which Weldon acknowledged as "not one of our finer moments."

But lawmakers also pressed the FDA on when and what it knew about the activity. New Brunswick, N.J.-based J&J has repeatedly claimed it alerted the agency's officials in Puerto Rico, where the defective Motrin was originally manufactured.

Sharfstein said J&J informed the FDA of its plan to repurchase the pills - which did not dissolve correctly - in April 2009.

"From this point, it took until July for the FDA to tell the company that a recall should be conducted," Sharfstein said in his testimony. "In my opinion that message should have been given sooner."

But Sharfstein stressed that the FDA did not know J&J had instructed contractors to pose as regular customers while buying the product and to not alert store employees to their activity.

"Based on the documents I reviewed, I don't see any indication that the FDA was aware of the surreptitious, lying nature of the recall," he said.

Republican lawmakers criticized a "too cozy" relationship between FDA and J&J employees, citing months-long e-mail exchanges between the two before regulators took action. But Sharfstein said ultimate blame lies with J&J, pointing out that the FDA does not have the authority to order when and how companies conduct recalls.

"I think fundamentally the responsibility is with the company to handle their quality problems in a much different way," Sharfstein said.

Companies are advised to work with the FDA on recalls, although that isn't a legal requirement.

Committee Chairman Edolphus Towns, D-N.Y., has introduced a bill that would give the agency the power to order recalls.

The maker of trusted brands like Tylenol and Benadryl, J&J has announced nine recalls of drugs for children and adults since last September with problems ranging from too much active ingredient to tiny shards of metal.

In May, J&J closed its Fort Washington, Pa., facility, the largest manufacturing site for children's medications. J&J announced Thursday it would begin shipping its grape-flavored Children's Tylenol next week, the first of its children's formulas to return to the market.

Weldon said the company plans to invest $100 million across the company to improve facilities, equipment and operations around the world.

Weldon, who has been CEO since 2002, missed the committee's last hearing because of back surgery.

Testifying beside him Thursday was J&J executive Colleen Goggins, who oversaw the consumer division of the company's McNeil Healthcare unit during the recalls.

At the May hearing, Goggins told lawmakers she had no knowledge of instructions to contractors involved in the phantom recall to not tell store employees what they were doing. In her testimony Thursday, Goggins acknowledged that the company wrote those instructions.

"Based on what I have learned since May, I believe that McNeil should have handled things differently," Goggins said.

Goggins will retire in March, Johnson & Johnson announced this month.
 

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

FDA Ties Tylenol Recall to Contamination

The Wall Street Journal

Raw materials that were to be used to make several lots of the Tylenol products for children and infants that were recalled over the weekend were contaminated, the Food and Drug Administration said Tuesday.

Johnson & Johnson recalled about 1,500 lots of bottled products, including pediatric versions of Tylenol, Motrin, Zyrtec and Benadryl. The company's McNeil Consumer Healthcare unit said it was withdrawing the over-the-counter products, starting late Friday, because of manufacturing problems at its Fort Washington, Pa., plant.

The FDA inspected the manufacturing plant during a routine visit between April 19 and April 30.

Agency inspectors found that raw materials set aside for use to make several lots were contaminated with gram-negative bacteria, according to the inspection report. Such organisms are so named because they don't pick up the purplish dye used in the test to distinguish them from gram-positive bacteria. Both kinds of bacteria can cause infections.

FDA officials said the company may have used the contaminated inactive ingredients in manufacturing, but the company's testing of finished products didn't turn up contamination.

"The findings are serious, but we cannot say yet whether further action by the FDA is warranted," Deborah Autor, the FDA's director of compliance, said in a conference call with reporters.

Some of the liquid products may contain a higher concentration of their active ingredient than they should, while others may contain inappropriate levels of inactive ingredients or tiny metallic particles left as a residue from the manufacturing process, according to the company. The FDA report cited 46 consumer complaints regarding "foreign materials, black or dark specks" that were reported to the company between June 2009 and April 2010.

A spokeswoman for J&J's McNeil unit said the company has halted production at one plant. Other plants also make the medicines, and there are lots from those plants that weren't recalled and remain on store shelves. The spokeswoman declined to comment on the cost of the recall to the company or the source of the raw materials.

In a separate statement, she said that the J&J unit's own reviews had turned up some of the quality issues that the FDA observed and that McNeil won't restart operations at the Fort Washington plant until it fixes the problems and can be assured of product quality.

"We have no higher concern than providing parents with the highest quality products for their children," the company's statement said.

FDA Commissioner Margaret Hamburg said the potential for harm is remote. Still, she urged parents to avoid giving the medicines for precautionary reasons. "There are many alternative versions of these medicines available in generic form," she said.

To assist parents, the company has set up a hot line at 888-222-6036 and a website at www.mcneilproductrecall.com.