WARNING!... MASSIVE FDA RECALL!... Glass Particles Found in Injectable Cancer Drugs!!!

Having to deal with the mental and physical pains of cancer is bad enough, but it's worse when you have to fear the medicine used to treat it.~ JD Heyes
Hospira, the world's leading provider of injectable drugs and
infusion technologies, announced in June that it will recall four of
its cancer drugs and other medications both in the United States and
from around the world - the fourth month in a row the company has had to
warn the healthcare industry of issues related to its products.
In a joint release with the Food and Drug Administration,
Hospira blamed the glass supplier for the injectables in recalling 19
lots of carboplatin, cytarabine, paclitaxel and methotrexate, which were
shipped between September 2011 and April of this year.
According to the
release, vials of these drugs have been discovered with "visible
particles embedded in the glass located at the neck of the vial."
Glass particles in the medicine, in other words.
"In
the event in which particulate matter could be injected into a patient,
there may be the potential for patient injury where medical
intervention may be required. Signs and symptoms might include bleeding,
bruising, inflammation, itching, rash, chest pain and respiratory
symptoms," said the joint statement.
Drugs in U.S., abroad recalled
Daniel Rosenberg, a spokesman for Hospira, told the Pharma Web site FiercePharmaManufacturing,
in an email: "Hospira has not received any reports of adverse events
related to these lots.
The root cause is a supplier glass defect, and we
have taken corrective action to prevent this from occurring again. For
U.S. customers, replacement product from other lots is available and no
drug shortages are expected as a result of this recall."
In
addition, the company has said recently it was recalling drugs from a
number of other nations ranging from Canada to Norway, Australia and
Vietnam, reports said.
Those global recalls don't include cytarabine;
however, but do include other drugs such as heparin, desferrioxamine,
oxaliplatin, fluorouracil and epirubicin.
In his email, Rosenberg
said it's possible that some countries could experience temporary
shortages of the drugs but added, "In most cases, we will have
replacement stock available, and we don't anticipate major disruptions
for the majority of our overseas customers."
The Pharma Web site
noted that shortages stemming from drug-maker manufacturing problems
have been a major issue over the past couple of years, particularly at
Hospira, which the site says "has found itself in the middle of it."
The
company is one of four other generic medication producers named in a
House committee report recently that are linked to grave shortages of
drugs in the United States, due to FDA actions requiring each to correct
quality control issues on their production lines.
Hospira has
also borne the brunt of a new legal strategy: Patients or their families
filing suit against drug makers who say a shortage of medications they
were taking worsened their medical conditions and, in some cases, even
led to death.
History of manufacturing problems
For example, FiercePharmaManufacturing
said, when a Tampa, Fla., woman discovered she could not get Hospira's
Aquasol A - or vitamin A palmitate - she sued the company, claiming she
became blind in one eye because she relied on the drug to correct a
vitamin A deficiency.
In that case; however, a federal judge
dismissed her claim, saying the company was not liable for failing to
keep a sufficient reserve supply of the drug to avoid unforeseen
shortages due to production problems.
To its credit, Hospira has
spent months upgrading production facilities in Austin, Texas, as well
as Clayton and Rocky Mount, N.C., after the FDA issued warnings about
problems there.
Still, problems have continued. In April and May
2012, Hospira was forced to recall single lots of overfilled injection
cartridges which contained morphine, a powerful painkiller, and
hydromorphine.
"In June; however, it acknowledged that the
problem was far more extensive than first believed and could affect as
many as 280 lots of 15 different Carpuject products," FiercePharmaManufacturing
reported.
"But instead of yanking the products out of the supply chain,
which the FDA said would lead to immediate shortages of some products,
healthcare providers were alerted that they needed to visually inspect
the products and adjust doses if cartridges were overfilled."
J D Heyes - July 20, 2012 - NaturalNews
Sources:
http://www.fiercepharmamanufacturing.com
http://www.reuters.com
http://www.fda.gov/Safety/Recalls/ucm311971.htm
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