Ranbaxy pays $500m to settle FDA fraud charges

by JoelLane 31. May 2013 16:40

Ranbaxy Indian generics giant Ranbaxy has agreed to pay a $500m fine to settle FDA charges of fraud – covering unsafe practices – at two of its factories.

The fine, the largest ever paid by a generic drug manufacturer in the US, comprises $150m for criminal charges and $350m for civil claims.

The offences relate to documents submitted to the Medicare and Medicaid programmes between 2003 and 2010, which Ranbaxy acknowledges made false claims regarding certain products.

FDA inspectors found that drugs manufactured at two Ranbaxy factories in India did not meet safety requirements.

The generic drugs in question included an acne drug (isotretinoin), an epilepsy and nerve pain drug (gabapentin) and antibiotics including amoxicillin.

Ranbaxy manufactured, distributed and sold these drugs when their strength, purity or quality was not that specified by the product literature or the FDA’s approved formulation.

The company acknowledged that inspections of its factories had found evidence of inadequate product testing and record-keeping, as well as deviations from good manufacturing practice.

It also admitted making “false, fictitious and fraudulent” statements to the FDA in annual reports filed in 2006 and 2007 regarding the dates of stability tests conducted on antibiotics.

In 2008, the FDA banned Ranbaxy from selling about 30 drugs in the US. In 2009, it halted reviews of certain Ranbaxy products.

Ranbaxy’s former owners, the family who founded it, have repudiated what it claims are implicit accusations of corruption levelled at it by the company’s present management.

Dinesh Thakur, Ranbaxy’s former Global Head of Research Information and Portfolio Management, will receive $48.6m of the settlement as a whistleblower.

CQC warns of dangerously under-staffed NHS providers

by JoelLane 16. January 2013 16:10

Chronic-Fatigue-Patients-are-Neglected The Care Quality Commission (CQC) has warned 26 NHS provider organisations that they are not employing and training enough staff to operate safely.

A total of 17 NHS hospitals, eight mental health trusts and one ambulance trust have been recorded as non-compliant with staffing level regulations following CQC inspections up to 9 January 2013.

This represents an improvement on the figure up to March 2012, when 40 NHS providers were recorded as dangerously under-staffed.

The warnings – made public following a request from Shadow Health Secretary Andy Burnham – related to lack of staff training as well as numbers of staff.

The following providers have been warned by CQC about the dangers posed by their under-staffing:

• Hospitals – Scarborough Hospital; Milton Keynes Hospital; Royal Cornwall Hospital, Truro; Walton Centre, Liverpool; Queen’s Hospital, Romford; Stamford and Rutland Hospital, Stamford; Southampton General Hospital; Croydon University Hospital; Bodmin Hospital; Northampton General Hospital; St Peter’s Hospital, Maldon; Queen Mary’s Hospital, London; Chase Farm Hospital, London; Westmorland General Hospital, Cumbria; Pilgrim Hospital, Lincolnshire; St Anne’s House, East Sussex; Princess Royal Hospital, West Sussex.

• Mental health trusts – Ainslie and Highams Inpatient Facility, London; Campbell Centre, Bedford; Forston Clinic, Dorset; Cavell Centre, Peterborough; Bradgate Mental Health Unit, Leicestershire; Avon and Wiltshire NHS Mental Health Trust; Blackberry Hill Hospital, Bristol; Park House, Manchester.

• Ambulance trust – London Ambulance Service.

The list reflects the extent to which the ‘lean’ corporate paradigm has penetrated NHS organisations.

Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt commented: “There can be no excuse for not providing appropriate staff levels when across the NHS generally there are now more clinical staff working than there were in May 2010 – including nearly 5000 more doctors and almost 900 extra midwives.”

However, Burnham drew attention to the lack of hospital nurses: “Nurses will not be able to provide the standards of care we all want to see when they are so overstretched and the wards so short-staffed.”

Some hospitals have challenged the inspection reports. The Bradgate Mental Health Unit’s Chief Executive, John Short, said: “The temporary absence of non-nursing therapeutic staff when the CQC conducted its inspection did not and does not relate to patient safety.”

In addition, the Royal Cornwall Hospital and the Bodmin Hospital both noted that more recent CQC inspections had found their staffing levels acceptable.

New stroke prevention drug launched in UK

by JoelLane 14. December 2012 16:30

Apixaban 5mg and 2 5mg packshot web A new drug for stroke prevention that offers a safer and more effective alternative to warfarin has been launched in the UK.

Eliquis (apixaban) from BMS and Pfizer is available for the prevention of stroke and systemic embolism in adult patients with non-valvular atrial fibrillation (AF) and one or more risk factors such as diabetes or advanced age.

Whereas patients treated with warfarin risk serious side-effects and need frequent dosage adjustment, Eliquis is taken (in tablet form) in one of two approved doses.

AF affects 1.2 million people and causes 12,500 strokes every year in the UK.

Clinical trials have shown that Eliquis is more effective than warfarin in preventing strokes and causes less bleeding, as well as presenting less challenge in terms of monitoring.

The ARISTOTLE trial evaluated apixaban versus warfarin in 18,201 patients with non-valvular AF who were suitable for warfarin. Professor John McMurray of the Institute of Cardiovascular & Medical Sciences, University of Glasgow, said that in the study “apixaban has demonstrated superiority in the reduction of stroke and systemic embolism over warfarin together with a significant reduction in major bleeding.”

In addition, he noted, “apixaban was better tolerated than warfarin, with fewer people stopping treatment.”

Trudie Lobban, CEO of the Atrial Fibrillation Association, added: “Patients being treated with warfarin have to undergo regular blood tests. Having the choice of effective new treatments which do not require monitoring provides the option to tailor therapy to the individual patient.

“This could also help to reduce the burden on the NHS to monitor INR and the associated impact on patients, their families and carers.”

BMS developed Eliquis, and since 2007 has worked in partnership with Pfizer to promote and sell the drug.

New stroke prevention drug launched in UK

by JoelLane 13. December 2012 17:56

eliquis web A new drug for stroke prevention that offers a safer and more effective alternative to warfarin has been launched in the UK.

Eliquis (apixaban) from Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMS) and Pfizer is available for the prevention of stroke and systemic embolism in adult patients with non-valvular atrial fibrillation (AF) and one or more risk factors such as diabetes or advanced age.

Whereas patients treated with warfarin risk serious side-effects and need frequent dosage adjustment, Eliquis is taken (in tablet form) in one of two approved doses.

AF affects 1.2 million people and causes 12,500 strokes every year in the UK.

Clinical trials have shown that Eliquis is more effective than warfarin in preventing strokes and causes less bleeding, as well as presenting less challenge in terms of monitoring.

The ARISTOTLE trial evaluated apixaban versus warfarin in 18,201 patients with non-valvular AF who were suitable for warfarin. Professor John McMurray of the Institute of Cardiovascular & Medical Sciences, University of Glasgow, said that in the study “apixaban has demonstrated superiority in the reduction of stroke and systemic embolism over warfarin together with a significant reduction in major bleeding.”

In addition, he noted, “apixaban was better tolerated than warfarin, with fewer people stopping treatment.”

Trudie Lobban, CEO of the Atrial Fibrillation Association, added: “Patients being treated with warfarin have to undergo regular blood tests. Having the choice of effective new treatments which do not require monitoring provides the option to tailor therapy to the individual patient.

“This could also help to reduce the burden on the NHS to monitor INR and the associated impact on patients, their families and carers.”

BMS developed Eliquis, and since 2007 has worked in partnership with Pfizer to promote and sell the drug.

CQC improving after difficult start

by JoelLane 26. June 2012 12:11

CQC_resized The Care Quality Commission has experienced “serious difficulties” in its first 18 months, according to a National Audit Office report.

The NAO said the regulator had “struggled” to fulfil its role due to NHS instability, making only half of the hospital inspections it had planned.

However the CQC was “now taking action to improve its performance”, the report concluded.

The new inspection body replaced the Healthcare Commission, the Commission for Social Care Inspection and the Mental Health Act Commission in October 2010.

The NAO noted that the abrupt shift had caused “disruption for providers and confusion for the public”.

By April 2011 the CQC had carried out only 53% of its planned inspections of hospitals and care homes, and had not met its schedule for registering care providers.

The organisation suffered from lack of staff, the review said: after a year, 14% of its positions – including 100 inspector posts – were unfilled due to Government restrictions on recruitment.

Its failure to identify patient mistreatment and neglect at a residential care home near Bristol was also criticised.

Both the DH and the CQC itself were to blame for the regulator’s failings, the NAO concluded.

Amyas Morse, head of the NAO, commented: “The CQC has had an uphill struggle to carry out its work effectively and has experienced serious difficulties. It is welcome that it is now taking action to improve its performance.

He added: “The commission and the Department of Health should make clear what successful regulation of this critical sector would look like.”

The DH is currently reviewing the CQC; its findings will be published later this year. Margaret Hodge, Chair of the House of Commons Public Accounts Committee, called the NAO’s report “deeply worrying”.

Pharma giants seek new indications for old drugs

by JoelLane 4. May 2012 15:33

Pf industry news Three leading pharmaceutical companies are working with the US National Institutes of Health (NIH) to find new indications for failed drugs.

Pfizer, AstraZeneca and Eli Lilly have joined a research programme that aims to speed innovative drug development by using existing compounds.

The programme will seek to match these compounds to newly discovered genetic disease pathways to identify accidentally pre-targeted drugs.

NIH Director Dr Francis Collins pointed to a familiar example: the first effective HIV treatment, AZT, was an unsuccessful cancer drug.

Such discoveries, he said, have been “sort of serendipitous” – but the goal of the new research programme is to replace serendipity with systematic analysis.

Recent research has identified the genetic causes of 4,500 diseases, but so far targeted treatments have only been developed for 250 of these.

The three drug companies have agreed to each make available at least 24 ‘failed’ drugs (withdrawn or never launched) that passed safety tests, making their testing in new indications relatively easy.

Scientists will apply for NIH grants to study specific drugs.

To simplify the legal framework, the programme allows the companies to retain ownership of their drugs while the researchers can patent their own discoveries.

The NIH will invest about $20m in the programme in its first year, and hopes for support from more pharmaceutical companies in the future.

Merck & Co to pay $950m Vioxx fine

by JoelLane 25. November 2011 12:36

Pf industry news Merck & Co (trading in Europe as MSD) has agreed to pay almost a billion dollars to settle criminal and civil claims relating to its US promotion of the arthritis drug Vioxx.

The total of $950m covers all outstanding cases in the US relating to the drug’s off-label marketing and alleged false statements regarding its safety.

Ironically, Merck’s anti-inflammatory drug has perhaps inflamed more legal trouble than any drug in recent history.

Launched in 1999, Vioxx (rofecoxib) was used worldwide for treatment of rheumatoid arthritis. Merck withdrew it from the global market in 2004, responding to evidence that it increased the risk of blood clotting and other serious cardiovascular events.

However, as early as September 2001, the FDA had sent Merck a Warning Letter directing the company to cease publishing marketing materials which it judged to be “false, lacking in fair balance, or otherwise misleading”.

The criminal charges against Merck in the USA relate to its promotion of Vioxx as a treatment for rheumatoid arthritis for three years without FDA approval. The drug was finally approved by them in that indication in 2002.

The civil charges in the USA have taken the form of thousands of private lawsuits by patients or their relatives, claiming that Merck marketed the drug in an off-label indication and/or that it made false statements to Medicaid regarding the drug’s risks.

Class actions on behalf of thousands of patients have been launched in the UK and Australia.

Merck made approximately $11bn in global revenue from Vioxx, but stands to lose most of that. The company has already paid $4.85bn to settle individual lawsuits and almost $2bn in legal costs.

Under the terms of a plea agreement with the US Department of Justice, Merck will plead guilty to a single misdemeanour for its promotion of Vioxx in the US between 199 and 2002, paying a $322m fine.

The company will settle all US civil claims with a $628m payment that covers both the off-label marketing and the claims of misleading statements. Of this payment, two-thirds will be recovered by the US Government and the rest by Medicaid.

Merck & Co commented that the civil settlement did not constitute any admission of liability or wrongdoing at the corporate level: “As part of the plea agreement, the US acknowledged that there was no basis for a finding of high-level management participation in the violation.”

The case reflects the issues facing global pharma companies concerning potential breaches of regulations by executives at lower levels.

The most dramatic allegation regarding Vioxx has come from Australia, where a court heard in 2009 that doctors had received a bogus ‘clinical research journal’ containing pro-Vioxx articles credited to non-existent doctors and written by Merck’s marketing team.

Better safe than sorry: medical devices and litigation

by emma 4. November 2011 09:36

78468376

What level of medical device failure is acceptable? Brad Abbey argues that the industry needs to arm itself against the threat of litigation – not with lawyers, but with the right kind of evidence.

I was somewhat taken aback by a letter in the British Medical Journal last December, where under the unlikely-sounding title ‘FDA is gold standard of review’, Mark B. Leahy, president and CEO of the US Medical Device Manufacturers Association, while singing the praises of the industry, said that a recent study of FDA-approved medical devices from the past 5 years showed that fewer than 1% had been recalled.

Most recalls, he said, were due to manufacturing and design problems in a post-marketing setting. This was in response to an article that had been highly critical of the safety surveillance of medical devices in the US and the low hurdles that have to be jumped to get a device approved (seemingly true on both sides of the Atlantic).

I am a generalist in the healthcare industry, mainly involved with medicines, but to say I was surprised by that figure is an understatement. I realise that the number of car recalls may be higher – but with a surgically implanted device, the owner cannot check it in at the service centre and pick it up at the end of the day.

I know that MHRA gives daily warnings about medical devices, from wheelchairs to drug-eluting stents; but given that the level of adverse event risk that is acceptable to the public for a medicine is somewhere between 1 in 10,000 and 1 in 100,000, the 1% risk seems difficult to accept.

A lead article in the May 2011 BMJ, by Peter Wilmshurst of STARFlex fame, opened with the comment that the regulation of medical devices is (in his opinion) unsatisfactory, unscientific and in need of a major overhaul. Pretty damning stuff.

 

Duty of care

The registration of medicines requires data on the safety, efficacy and quality of products, and the numbers of patients needed to demonstrate an acceptable risk/benefit profile can be dauntingly high. The same level of scrutiny does not happen in Europe for medical devices, where a single approval can trigger cross-community acceptance.

With the increasing complexity of devices and the high levels of patient expectation, it is hardly surprising that when seemingly good devices go wrong the patients want compensation – and, where there is a suitable arena, for punishment to be meted out.

In the US, where many complex medical devices are developed and initially marketed, the ‘learned intermediary’ doctrine has been used by healthcare product manufacturers in recent times to protect themselves in the event of something going wrong. This doctrine, used in the US legal system, states that the manufacturer of a product has fulfilled their duty of care when they provide all the necessary information to a ‘learned intermediary’, who then interacts with the consumer.

This doctrine has been used primarily by pharmaceutical and medical device manufacturers in defence against tort suits. In a majority of American states, the courts have accepted this as a liability shield for pharmaceutical companies.

However, drug and medical device manufacturers sustained an unexpected blow in August 2008 in Rimbert v Eli Lilly and Company: in a federal court decision, for the first time, there was a rejection of the learned intermediary doctrine in its entirety. The decision rejected the notion that the manufacturers of drugs and medical devices do not have to make the patient fully aware of the risks associated with them and that this can be delegated to the prescriber.

The idea underlying the ‘learned intermediary’ doctrine is that the prescriber, who has expert knowledge and skill, should make the decision about risk. But changes in the consumer environment whereby prescription products can be advertised directly to potential patients have rendered this justification obsolete, and so it was predictable that for medical devices – some of them traditionally never coming ‘into the hands’ of the patient – the risk scenario would be influenced by the lesser amount of risk/benefit information needed before approval for marketing. While the doctrine has not been used in Europe, the risk information relating to devices is lagging behind that for medicines.

In order to be vigilant about the risks of medical devices, companies will be best served by surveillance systems that monitor the risk/benefit profile of products from the moment they are first evaluated (even if that takes place in animal models). This is not always easy.

A letter in the BMJ (in the same issue as Leahy’s letter) from a Welsh group of doctors highlights the problems of post-marketing surveillance for medical instruments, and in particular the use of single-use devices for tonsillectomy from 2001 in the wake of the variant Creuzfeldt-Jakob disease that followed the ‘mad cow’ scare of the 1990s.

Widespread adverse events were associated with these non-reusable instruments despite their CE marking, and they were deemed not fit for purpose. The case for reform of medical device regulation therefore seems a given.

 

Hip or lame?

In the meantime it seems that the visible portion of the iceberg of device regulation-related problems is giving rise to a stream of litigation that could possibly become a tide. Recent Medtech Business news reports have followed the fate of orthopaedic company DePuy and its ASR hip replacement.

Hip replacement is one of the clinical successes of the marriage between orthopaedic surgeons and the medical device industry, and it was estimated (before this year’s NHS rationing) that about 70,000 patients were undergoing total hip replacement each year in the UK.

I remember metal-on-metal hip replacements from the 1970s (I have one in a drawer at home that came to me as a result of its breaking), and they became popular again in the 1990s. However, the most recent generation have not fared so well, with higher than expected rates of failure and concerns about excessive levels of metal ions (cobalt and chromium) in the blood of patients.

According to 2010 data from the National Joint Registry of England and Wales, the DePuy ASR Hip Resurfacing System has a revision rate of 12% at 5 years after surgery and the DePuy ASR XL Acetabular System has a revision rate of 13%.

That means that during the first 5 years after a hip replacement with the DePuy ASR hip, at least 1 in 8 patients will experience hip failure requiring painful and expensive revision surgery. With more than 90,000 DePuy ASR hips in patients worldwide, over 11,000 people could require additional surgery due to the defective design of this implant and DePuy’s failure to remove it from the market earlier.

One of the questions that remains unanswered was whether there were potential conflicts of interest between the supplier and the healthcare professionals who developed and were involved in promoting these devices. The key issue in litigants’ minds is that the device did not perform as well as such a device might be expected to, and it seems that the device’s registration in the US was obtained without clinical trials to prove its long-term safety and efficacy. In a litigious society such as the US, where someone must pay for any mistake, the supplier appears to have suffered with the rolling of heads and the decision to remove the offending brand from the market.

Don’t get the idea that this case is a one-off: the recent history of medical devices suggests that arrivals on the market may sometimes be premature, as real risks may not have become apparent. Whether this is related to inappropriate endorsements from the medical profession is difficult to judge, but there are known examples of high-level payments to medical inventors who ‘sell’ their developments to industry and subsequently endorse them.

On the other hand, everyone is aware of what happened to Peter Wilmshurst when he took the opposite stance against a device manufacturer: there was a serious attempt to punish his critical views (which seemed to be well founded) and personally break him through the English court system.

 

Evidence is strength

Litigation against medical device companies is nothing new. However, in an age when people with problems can readily find lawyers willing to take on their problems, and some lawyers (particularly in the US) go looking for people who did not even know they had problems, access to litigation seems to be easier – and it is oiled by the possibility of compensation (which may be deserved when devices turn out to be inadequate or unsafe).

A Google search for the term ‘medical device litigation’ returned 640,000 hits; most of the leading ones were to do with lawyers offering their services in the pursuit of such litigation, or training sessions for lawyers who want to become involved in such cases, or training for companies who want to avoid them. I don’t believe a wake-up call about the risks of being sued is necessary, but what is well worth thinking about is the possible root causes of the current danger, which can ruin a company that believed it had a good product.

The message I am offering is consistent. The products of the healthcare industry must be subject to close and continuous scrutiny for their risk/benefit profile, and this should be done prior to marketing and continue in a structured manner post-marketing. NICE advisory policy on the best devices to use is still in its early stages.

There seems to be a raft of opinion supporting the idea that the regulation of medical devices (in Europe, and probably also in the US) needs to be overhauled to eliminate the placing of devices on the market with inadequate safety and efficacy monitoring.

Rather than finding ways of avoiding expenditure during a product’s development and launch by minimising the collection of such data, companies need to embrace the need for resilient data sets and continual risk/benefit signal monitoring. The competent authorities will wake up to this need, and those with effective systems in place will withstand the culture change best.

Brad Abbey is an industry observer, or the pen-name of an industry observer. The views expressed in this article are those of Brad Abbey, and do not necessarily reflect the views of Medtech Business.

Obama puts pressure on drug shortage problem

by emma 1. November 2011 15:40

Pharma Industry News

Barack Obama has outlined a number of measures aimed at tackling the prescription drug shortages in the US.

The President has signed an Executive Order directing the FDA to broaden the knowledge of potential medicine shortages and has asked them to exercise regulatory reviews to help prevent future shortages.

The Order also states that the FDA should work with the Department of Justice to examine whether prescription shortages have led to illegal price gouging or stockpiling of medication.

“This is a problem we can't wait to fix,” said the President. “The shortage of prescription drugs drives up costs, leaves consumers vulnerable to price gouging and threatens our health and safety.”

Previously, the FDA has only had the power to direct drug makers to inform them of the discontinuation of a medication when it is available through a single manufacturer. The Executive Order now states that the Agency can take further action, asking drug manufacturers to provide adequate advance notice of discontinuances or other actions that could lead to shortages.

The Order also requires the FDA to review new manufacturing sites, drug suppliers and production changes.

A statement from the White House said: “While the causes and many of the solutions are outside of the FDA's authority, including the need for additional manufacturing capacity in the private sector, the Administration will continue its ongoing work with manufacturers and other stakeholders to help address drug shortages.”

It is estimated that typical grey market vendors mark prices up by an average of 650%, as a results of prescription drug shortages.

EMA reviews NSAIDs safety

by emma 24. October 2011 13:30

Pf Industry News

The EMA has started a new review of the cardiovascular safety of non-selective NSAIDS (non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs).

The CHMP’s previous opinion of NSAIDs in 2006 was positive, but a small possibility of an increased risk of thrombotic events such as heart attack or stroke could not be excluded, particularly involving high doses and long-term treatment with NSAIDs.

The CHMP will update its opinion in light of recently published evidence from the independent research project Safety Of non-Steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (SOS) funded by the European Commission.

NSAIDS have been subject to several European reviews in relation to gastrointestinal and cardiovascular safety and the occurrence of serious skin reactions since the CHMP’s 2006 opinion.

It will review the results thoroughly, together with other available clinical research data, to distinguish the need to update the CHMP’s 2006 opinion.

TextBox

Tag cloud

Calendar

<<  June 2013  >>
MoTuWeThFrSaSu
272829303112
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
1234567

View posts in large calendar