GlaxoSmithKline sold an improperly made antidepressant and tainted skin ointment, regulators said
By Pete Williams
NBC News
October 26, 2010
The government claimed that the
plant mixed different strengths of
some pills together, such as both
30 mg and 10 mg tablets in the
same bottle, and that Bactroban
and Kytril, an anti-nausea
medication, were contaminated
with microorganisms.
The plant's manufacturing process caused Paxil CR tablets, made in two layers, to split apart, the Justice Department said. As a result, a patient could take a dose with no therapeutic effect or one that contained no controlled release mechanism.
The company closed the plant in Cidra in 2009 and no longer owns it.
A big factor in the lawsuit was the role of a former manager of quality assurance for GSK, Cheryl Eckard, who became a whistleblower after she was fired. She will receive roughly $96 million from the federal share of the settlement.
"We regret that we operated the Cidra facility in a manner that was inconsistent with current good manufacturing practice requirements and with GSK's commitment to manufacturing quality," said PD Villarreal, senior vice president and head of global litigation.
Deficiencies at a separate drug plant in Puerto Rico led the Food and Drug Administration Tuesday to withhold approval of a new drug for another pharmaceutical company, Bristol-Myers Squibb. The FDA said an inspection found possible contamination and detected glass particles in drug vials at the plant in Manati. Those problems must be resolved, the FDA said, before approval is granted for sales of belatacept, intended to prevent rejection of transplanted organs.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/39852323/ns/health-health_care/#