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Express Pharma SE Asia's favored trade magazine publishes my article on Quality-by-Design (QbD) in their September 16, 2010 issue... Keywords and tags:
#DrShrutiBhat #Success #HallofFame #ContinuousImprovementLeader
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Drug recalls reached a record high 1,742 in 2009 — more than four times the amount in 2008. Bowman Cox, managing editor of the Gold Sheet told CNN Money that in light of the 296 recalls issued in the first six months of 2010, there could be 600 or more recalls this year.
Why So Many Recalls? Analysts and legislators are examining the recall statistics to find sources and solutions to the pharmaceutical safety issue. 1. Drug repackaging : Advantage Dose, a now-defunct Shreveport, LA based drug re-packager, was responsible for more than 1,000 of the 2009 recalls. Companies like Advantage Dose repackage and re-label drugs into smaller units for resale or distribution to health care facilities. After excluding Advantage Dose from the count, there still remains a 50% jump in recalls from 2008 to 2009. 2. The generic rush : Gold Sheet’s Cox suggests that generic manufacturers cut drug design costs in their rush to be first to market after a branded-drug’s patent protection expires, decreasing quality. “The first generic applicant typically gets the lion’s share of the business for the new drug…the 180 day exclusivity… So they get the application. They make and market the drug, but they could still have problems down the road if they haven’t really understood the optimum way to make that drug(product).” One example of a design failure is Caraco Pharmaceutical Laboratories’ “tablet thickness” recalls in March 2009. 3. Manufacturing lapses: Some experts say the biggest culprits include the quality of raw materials and contamination. Some months ago, HealthReformWatch.com reported in Pharmaceutical Outsourcing: Trading Quality for Lower Costs? that India’s largest pharmaceutical manufacturer had been cited several times in recent years for manufacturing violations. Additional recalls include vaccines produced by Shantha Biotechnics for Sanofi-Aventis and injectible drugs made by Claris Lifesciences for Pfizer. The FDA stated its intent on May 5, 2010 to “propose stronger regulation for pharmaceutical companies that outsource manufacturing, putting more responsibility on the companies to ensure the purity and safety of the products…” 4. Increased FDA scrutiny of manufacturing facilities: Which came first, the chicken or the egg? Increased FDA oversight may or may not have led to the increased number of recalls; however, the recalls will probably lead to increased FDA regulatory power. As Jennifer Jascoll reported, Senator Michael F. Bennet (D-CO) proposed the Drug Safety and Accountability Act of 2010 on August 3, 2010. According to Bennet’s press release, the bill would strengthen manufacturer quality standards, enhance the USFDA’s ability to protect Americans through improved tracking of foreign manufacturing sites, and give the FDA much-needed authority to recall potentially dangerous drugs.”Currently, the FDA is empowered to issue warnings and recommend that a manufacturer issue a recall. According to CNN Money, the FDA has not identified any alarming pattern. FDA spokeswoman Elaine Gansz Bobo stated, “[s]ince every recall situation is unique, it would be difficult to assess whether there are any trends or increases in recalls this year… At this time, however, we have not identified any trends.” Despite the FDA’s lack of concern, other federal agencies are interested in the practices of pharmaceutical companies. Further Federal Investigations According to the N.Y.Times, federal prosecutors and securities regulators are investigating pharmaceutical companies for potential violations of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA). The FCPA is an anti-bribery law which bars companies from offering foreign government officials items of value for profit. For instance, Pfizer disclosed in April “that it paid $35m over six months to 4,500 doctors in private practice for education and the development and marketing of new drugs.” Although this practice is legal in the U.S., such payments are illegal in many foreign countries where physicians are employed by the government. On November 17, 2009, Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer stated that the Department of Justice intended to focus its attention on the pharmaceutical industry: In some foreign countries and under certain circumstances, nearly every aspect of the approval, manufacture, import, export, pricing, sale and marketing of a drug product may involve a “foreign official” within the meaning of the FCPA. The depth of government involvement in foreign health systems, combined with fierce industry competition and the closed nature of many public formularies, creates, in our view, a significant risk that corrupt payments will infect the process. Our remarkable FCPA unit and our terrific health care fraud unit will be working together to investigate FCPA violations in the pharmaceutical industry in an effort to maximize our ability to effectively enforce the law in this high-risk area. “Corrupt practices” under the FCPA are not limited to cash in envelopes. Inappropriate payments for lavish hospitality, consulting, licensing agreements, and even charitable donations may raise red flags for government investigators. Could bribery be contributing to decreased quality and the sudden rise in recalls? According to the Financial Times, the DoJ is focusing its efforts elsewhere: [T]he DoJ is particularly interested in corrupt payments that may have influenced the reliability or integrity of data in clinical trials performed outside the US. A recent report by the Department of Health and Human Services found 80 percent of marketing applications for drugs approved by the Food and Drug Administration in the US had relied on at least one foreign trial. It appears that the DoJ’s scrutiny of clinical trials is not without merit. The N.YTimes reports that “[l]ast month, a federal drug official reported that he found repeated instances in a landmark clinical trial of Avandia, a controversial diabetes medicine, in which patients taking Avandia appeared to suffer serious heart problems that were not counted in the study’s crucial tally of adverse events.” The clinical trials for Avandia included many foreign trial sites, which were submitted in support of the drugs’ application to enter and remain on the U.S. market. GlaxoSmithKline, the trial’s sponsor, has not been accused of fraud. According to recent regulatory filings, the following companies are under investigation for possible violations of the FCPA:
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