Home health remedies Glenmark gets FDA warning letter for plant that produced defective creams

Glenmark gets FDA warning letter for plant that produced defective creams

22
0
SHARE

India’s Glenmark has been having its manufacturing problems, what with recalls and complete response letters (CRLs). Now, to round things out, the FDA has issued a warning letter for one of its key manufacturing facilities.

The drugmaker in a public filing said (PDF) the FDA has issued the warning letter for the company’s Baddi facility in Himachal Pradesh following an inspection that had initially resulted in a Form 483. 

The drugmaker said it is responding and doesn’t believe the action will interrupt manufacturing at the facility or impact sales. Glenmark reported the facility, which accounts for about 7% of its U.S. sales, is projected to produce about $30 million in revenues for the company. 

On-Demand Webinar

De-Risking the Solid Form Landscape of an API

This presentation will discuss how predictable stability and solubility can minimize development timelines and cost. Attend to hear about two case studies exemplifying the importance of understanding the hydration space of an API and how hydrate formation may be avoided by development of a robust crystallization procedure.

RELATED: FDA cites Glenmark plant where warehouse temperatures exceeded 110˚F

Glenmark didn’t indicate what the issues were, but the plant has a history of manufacturing problems. In August, it recalled more than 31,000 tubes of clotrimazole and betamethasone dipropionate cream because of consumer complaints the fungal fighter had a liquid texture. A month earlier, it voluntary recalled an undisclosed number of tubes of mometasone furoate cream because it was found to be gritty. Both products came out of the company’s plant in Baddi.

RELATED: Glenmark has wind knocked out of NDA for respiratory drug by FDA

In 2017, the FDA issued a Form 483 for the facility, pointing out it had received more than 20 complaints about a cream that buyers said was watery. Warehouse records showed the drug had been stored for more than 30 hours at temperatures that ran as high as 112˚F, and the company didn’t investigate whether that was the root cause of the texture issue.

Glenmark has had issues at other plants. The FDA issued a CRL in June for its New Drug Application for Ryaltris, a nasal spray to treat seasonal allergic rhinitis and Glenmark’s leading respiratory pipeline candidate. It said the CRL cites deficiencies in the Drug Master File relating to one of the active pharmaceutical ingredients as well as in the manufacturing facilities.

Source link

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

eleven + five =