Saturday, April 26, 2014

Sun Pharma drug facility banned after FDA found data flaws, rat traps

Testing flaws, a garbage pileup, and a ‘un-cleanable’ laboratory led to the FDA ban, according to an inspection report
According to the FDA’s November report, the inspectors reviewed Sun Pharma’s recordkeeping and the integrity of its data at the plant, which makes cephalosporin antibiotics as well as bulk ingredients for the medication.
US regulators who visited a Sun Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd drug plant in India before the facility was banned last month from exporting to the US saw testing flaws, a garbage pileup, and a laboratory they called un-cleanable. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) inspectors observed that some workers misrepresented test data and deleted undesirable results, according to an inspection report known as Form 483 that Bloombergobtained via a Freedom of Information Act request. There were rodent traps and a strong smell of urine in a quality-control lab area and bathrooms were in total disrepair, with what appeared to be human waste on a wall, the report said.
On 12 March, the agency barred the antibiotics plant in Karkhadi from exporting to the US, the factory’s primary market. The findings of the November inspection haven’t previously been reported, and the FDA didn’t disclose specific reasons when announcing the ban.
“We have sent our response to the FDA and given that the facility now has an import alert, it’s clear that the FDA does not agree with our view,” Sun Pharma said in an emailed response to questions from Bloomberg News. “In this process, we have learnt and have resolved to work on further strengthening our systems and controls.”Sun Pharma this month agreed to buy Ranbaxy Laboratories Ltd, which has four factories banned by the FDA. Last year, Ranbaxy agreed to pay $500 million to settle a whistleblower lawsuit and federal criminal charges that the company sold adulterated drugs while lying about it to the regulator.
Generics demand
Indian drug makers have become major sellers to the US as demand for cheaper generics rises. The industry is also an essential provider of affordable medicines at home and in other parts of the developing world such as Africa.Drug factories in India are coming under greater scrutiny after the FDA imposed restrictions on several suppliers of generic medicines to the US for failing to meet manufacturing standards. Sun hasn’t faced FDA curbs in the past five years even as the regulator barred some factories from Indian rivals including Ranbaxy and Wockhardt Ltd over the last year.
Spokesmen at Ranbaxy and Wockhardt didn’t immediately respond to calls and emails seeking comment for this article.Founded by Indian billionaire Dilip Shanghvi in 1983 with five psychiatry products and a single manufacturing facility, Sun has grown into a company with net sales of Rs.11,240 crore in the year ended March 2013, with production sites in other parts of India and several countries including the US, Bangladesh, Hungary and Israel.
Negligible contribution
While Sun’s banned facility contributed less than 1% of revenue in 2013, the stock could be affected if operational risks become repetitive, Balaji Prasad, an analyst at Barclays Plc in Mumbai, wrote in a 13 March note to clients. The facility has a negligible contribution to Sun’s revenue, the company said when the FDA issued the import ban.Sun Pharma rose to close at Rs.625.60 in Mumbai trading on 23 April. The stock has advanced about 10% this year, outpacing the 8.1% increase in the benchmark S&P BSE Sensex.
Corrective steps
According to the FDA’s November report, the inspectors reviewed Sun’s recordkeeping and the integrity of its data at the plant, which makes cephalosporin antibiotics as well as bulk ingredients for the medication.The inspectors observed that analysts regularly delete undesirable chromatographic results, and products are retested without initiating an investigation. Manufacturing waste, old equipment and other garbage was seen in the facility’s perimeter manufacturing areas making them susceptible to pests, the report said.Sun Pharma has implemented corrective measures on cleanliness at the plant, and where testing procedures weren’t properly followed, it has taken the necessary disciplinary action and replaced equipment, according to the email to Bloomberg News. The drug maker said some of the FDA’s observations were related to the surrounding areas of the buildings, and it hasn’t made a final decision on whether to shut the facility.
The FDA in an e-mailed statement to Bloomberg News declined to comment further.
In 2009, the FDA ordered manufacturing to be halted at Sun’s Detroit-based unit after a string of recalls over manufacturing defects. Three years later, the FDA cleared the subsidiary to resume operations with two products, according to a company statement at the time. Sun Pharma didn’t immediately respond to an e-mail requesting an update on that unit.
Data integrity

The FDA last year banned about 20 plants in India from exporting drugs to the US and warned several others.The latest ban on Ranbaxy occurred in January, when the FDA barred one of its plants from exporting to the US after finding workers there overwrote raw data collected on samples over five months until they got acceptable results.“It’s not like our quality expectations are that radically different from the US,” said Ajit Mahadevan, Mumbai-based leader of the life sciences consulting group at Ernst and Young, referring to the Indian drug industry. “It’s just that in its execution, there’s a lot less intensity perhaps, and people get away with a lot more.

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