By Liz Kowalczyk
Globe Staff /
November 13, 2012
Pharmacist Barry Cadden, co-owner of the Framingham pharmacy blamed for the
deadly national meningitis outbreak, has a long history of not cooperating with
federal regulators, including one 2004 inspection when he initially denied
having an eye medication that was the subject of a complaint, according to a
memo released Monday by a congressional committee.
An inspector later spotted a drawer labeled with the drug’s name, Trypan
blue, and asked Cadden to open it. Inside were 189 vials.
The memo, based on documents and briefings from the US Food and Drug
Administration, was prepared by the Republican staff of a House committee
holding a hearing Wednesday on the causes of the outbreak and whether it could
have been prevented.
They raise questions about why the Massachusetts pharmacy board did not take
stronger action against New England Compounding Center, despite having
investigated 12 complaints about the company’s practices over a decade and
receiving a 2003 warning from the FDA that the pharmacy’s practices could cause
“serious public health consequences’’ and should be curtailed.
Staffers of the Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee of the House
Committee on Energy and Commerce also questioned why the FDA itself did not take
enforcement action against the pharmacy, especially because some of the
complaints involved patients becoming ill from New England Compounding products
that were supposed to be sterile but were apparently contaminated with microbes.
One of those drugs, methylprednisolone acetate, is the same steroid implicated
in the ongoing outbreak.
So far, the crisis has sickened 438 people and killed 32 who contracted a
rare form of fungal meningitis from a contaminated steroid made by the pharmacy.
The committee has subpoenaed Cadden to testify because he indicated he would not
appear voluntarily.
Pharmacy spokesman Andrew Paven said he could not comment on the memo, which
cites several instances when Cadden refused to cooperate with investigators and
challenged the agency’s authority over his business.
During an inspection in March 2002, Cadden cooperated the first day but then
on the second day “had a complete change in attitude [and] basically would not
provide any additional information either by responding to questions or
providing records. Mr. Cadden challenged FDA jurisdiction/authority to be at his
pharmacy,” according to the memo, which cited an FDA report.
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