FDA Publishes Draft Guidance For Facility Quality Assessment

Share on facebook
Share on twitter
Share on linkedin
Share on email
Share on print

Teva Parenteral Medicines Recalls Adrucil

The FDA published a draft guidance for the pharmaceutical industry to ensure that FDA-regulated medications are continually manufactured under strict quality standards.

The draft guidance, published July 27 and titled “Request for Quality Metrics,” describes a set of measurements that the agency would use to evaluate the quality of the facilities and the processes that manufacturers use to make FDA-regulated drugs and biologics.

These include prescription drugs and certain biological products. The guidance also encourages these manufacturers to conduct robust quality measurements on their own products.

“We believe a careful analysis of quality metrics can help FDA better identify which facilities are at the highest risk for quality problems,” FDA officials Ashley Boam and Mary Malarkey wrote on FDA Voice. “This will help us use our inspection resources most efficiently and effectively.

Boam is FDA acting director of the Office of Policy for Pharmaceutical Quality, Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, and Malarkey is FDA Director of the Office of Compliance and Biologics Quality, Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research.

“FDA has been working for many years on solutions to encourage an support the modernization of pharmaceutical manufacturing, such as the use of risk-based regulatory strategies for oversight,” Boam and Malarkey wrote. “Our quality metrics initiative is one of several approaches we believe will further support this effort.”

FDA is receiving comments on the draft for 60 days from the publication of the guidance.

The agency will host a public meeting Aug. 24.

Teva Parenteral Medicines has recalled six lots of Adrucil due to the potential presence of particulate matter identified as aggregate of silicone rubber pieces from a filler diaphragm and fluorouracil crystals.

Adrucil Injection (fluororacil injection, USP) 5g/100 mL (50 mg/mL) is used in the palliative management of carcinoma of the colon, rectum, breast, stomach and pancreas and is packaged in pharmacy bulk packages.

Administration of an intravenous product with particulate matter has the potential to result in inflammation, allergic reactions, or blockage of blood vessels—leading to tissue death, which may be life-threatening if vital organs are affected.

According to FDA, Teva has not received any reports of adverse events related to this recall. The product lot numbers affected by this recall can be found here.

Anyone with an existing inventory of the recalled lots should stop use and distribution, and quarantine the product immediately, according to FDA.

Customers should notify all users in their facility. Customers who have further distributed the recalled product should notify any accounts or additional locations which may have received the recalled product and instruct them if they have redistributed the product to notify their accounts, locations or facilities to the user level.

Healthcare professionals and patients are encouraged to report adverse events or side effects related to the use of these products to FDA’s MedWatch Safety Information and Adverse Event Reporting Program.

YOU MAY BE INTERESTED IN

Shearwood McClelland III’s grandfather was a ditchdigger who dreamed that his six Black daughters would become doctors. McClelland’s mother did not disappoint—she became the first Black woman board-certified in maternal fetal medicine in the history of the United States.  Now, McClelland is the chief medical officer of Cancer Health Equity at the University of Oklahoma...

As oncology enters a new era of precision medicine, the Food and Drug Administration’s evolving biomarker strategy aims to ensure that life-saving therapies are tailored to individual patient needs, fostering safer and more effective treatments.  Historically, therapies were approved with broad indications based on overall efficacy, even when outcomes for biomarker-positive and -negative patients were...

In the evolving landscape of pediatric oncology, survivorship research has become an essential component of our mission to improve long-term patient outcomes. At City of Hope, we are focused on not only curing childhood cancers but also ensuring that survivors live the healthiest lives possible. A significant part of my research has been dedicated to mitigating the long-term toxicities of cancer therapy—particularly cardiovascular complications that can arise decades after treatment.

Never miss an issue!

Get alerts for our award-winning coverage in your inbox.

Login