March 12, 2013
Agency continues maneuvering for greater oversight
in wake of fungal meningitis deaths
Compounding pharmacies have been in the spotlight since a fungal meningitis outbreak was identified in October 2012. As of March 4, the outbreak had caused the deaths of 48 people and sickened 672 others, according to CDC. The outbreak was traced to contaminated injectable steroids manufactured in unsanitary conditions at New England Compounding Center in Framingham, Massachusetts. “The company got greedy and overextended, and we got sloppy," Joe Connolly, a lab technician at the center, told 60 Minutes in an investigation that aired on March 10. “Quantities of drugs increased by a factor of 1,000. … We became a manufacturer overnight," Connolly said.
Wide variety of problems found
Inspectors found 13 deficiencies at PharMEDium Services in Cleveland, MS; 12 at AnazaoHealth in Tampa, FL; 7 at Central Admixture Pharmacy Services (CAPS) in Chicago; and 7 at Lee Pharmacy in Fort Smith, AR. The report listed numerous problems related to drug sterilization and testing; environmental and building conditions; equipment, containers, and closures; employee apparel; and production and process control procedures.Inadequate procedures and testing to ensure sterilization, potency, stability, and appropriate beyond-use dates of sterile injectable drug products occurred at all four facilities. PharMEDium, for example, did not perform endotoxin testing on all finished sterile injectable drug products and assigned a 90-day expiration date for a drug without using “meaningful and specific test methods” to ensure stability, according to the report.
At AnazaoHealth, CAPS, and Lee Pharmacy, procedures designed to prevent contamination did not include validation of the sterilization process. CAPS did not test an adequate number of batches of each drug to determine appropriate beyond-use dates. Lee Pharmacy’s sterilization processes for suspensions and solutions were not designed to follow a scientific rationale and thus had no adequate controls to prevent failures.
Inspectors noted deficient
Three of the facilities were cited for employee use of nonsterile or inappropriate clothing and incorrect gloving procedures. In the
Inspectors also found unclean, nonsterile, and leaking drug product containers, bags, and closures, including many items not tested to ensure suitability for their intended use. At PharMEDium, for example, container closure systems “did not provide adequate protection against external factors” such as light, which could cause drug deterioration or contamination, the report states. At AnazaoHealth, nondepyrogenated glass vials and rubber stoppers were used in endotoxin testing of all sterile injectable drugs. The CAPS facility had not taken appropriate action to investigate and correct recurring leaks in sterile injectable total parenteral nutrition bags.
The complete inspection reports can be accessed on
the FDA website.
Facilities serve a need
Compounding pharmacies serve a crucial need. Many hospitals outsource sterile compounding to avoid the costs of building, staffing, and maintaining their own clean rooms, which must comply with United States Pharmacopeia (USP) <797> standards. In New York, after the state pharmacy board issued a temporary ban on PharMEDium’s products for which there is no patient-specific prescription, some hospitals were left scrambling to prepare large volumes of compoundedContinue reading here
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