Saturday, November 24, 2012

The 2012 fungal meningitis outbreak: Whose fault?


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Updated: 11/24/2012 9:55:47 AM EST Health Dept. Takes Action Against Pharmacy A compounding pharmacy in Tamarac has been suspended, following a less than glowing inspection.

by Alan McBride

Florida Department of Health issued an Emergency Suspension Order of People's Choice Pharmacy, a compounding pharmacy located in Tamarac.

The order immediately suspended People's from operating as a community, sterile products, and special compounding pharmacy in the state of Florida.

The order comes after the department had conducted a routine pharmacy inspection of People's Choice Pharmacy in mid-October.

The inspection revealed that the pharmacy lacked quality assurance in high-risk sterile compounding.

It was also found that the pharmacy's use of unlicensed personnel for high-risk sterile compounding endangered the public.

The Department found further that People's Choice Pharmacy's failure to maintain adequate sanitation increased the likelihood that the medications compounded at this facility may become contaminated.

The issues inspectors reported finding gain substantially more public attention in the wake of a scandal involving tainted steroidal compounds.

the company NECC has been all but shuttered after medicine it compounded was traced to cases of fungal meningitis.

There have been three deaths in Florida as a result of fungal meningitis.

Emergency suspension or restriction orders are not considered final agency action but are imposed when the subject's actions pose an immediate serious danger to public health, as specified by section 456.074, Florida Statutes.

The subject is entitled to a hearing before final action is taken by a regulatory board or by DOH.

The suspension, however, will remain in effect until final disciplinary action is taken, the suspension is lifted, or the case is successfully appealed.

15 meningitis lawsuits filed in N.J. over tainted steroids


FRIDAY NOVEMBER 23, 2012, 11:03 PM
THE RECORD

Fifteen lawsuits, including nine this week, have been filed in New Jersey by patients exposed to or sickened by fungal meningitis in the fatal nationwide outbreak caused by tainted steroid medication.
The lawsuits in Superior Court in Cumberland County name New England Compounding Center in Massachusetts, as well as the doctors and health care facilities that provided the injections to treat chronic pain. They include South Jersey Regional Medical Center in Vineland and Premier Orthopaedic Associates of Southern New Jersey, which has offices in Vineland and Elmer.
Several of the patients who filed suit were hospitalized for treatment of fungal meningitis, including Jose A. Ramos, a 35-year-old Millville resident who received an injection for back pain in August. He “has suffered with headaches, visual disturbances and neck stiffness,” the lawsuit said, noting that “he will continue to take oral anti-fungal medication and pain medication … continue to receive blood testing to monitor his liver function; [and] also follow-up with CDC physicians.”
Others described severe nausea, headaches, neck pain, increased back pain, sensitivity to light, and dizziness in their suits. After the recall, one woman underwent two failed spinal taps to confirm her diagnosis before being hospitalized to undergo a third. The original reason for her injection in June was to treat back pain.

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Patients say their cases ignored in meningitis outbreak


Developments last week indicate that the scope of the meningitis outbreak could be wider than previously believed.

5:07PM EST November 24. 2012 - NASHVILLE -- After being treated with drugs from New England Compounding Center, 52-year-old Bret Moody was told he has fungal meningitis. He's infected with Aspergillus, the first contaminant found in a national outbreak of illness tied to tainted medication.
But when health officials count the nearly 500 people sickened by the moldy drugs, they don't include Moody and others like him who fail to match the profile of most victims.
Moody, who also has been diagnosed with leukemia, is one of many patients nationwide who question whether health officials are undercounting the victims of the crisis.
Some got the spinal steroid, methylprednisolone acetate, blamed for the meningitis outbreak that has killed at least 34 nationwide. Some, like Moody, got other drugs from the Massachusetts firm. But if their symptoms are not already linked to the outbreak, they say, medical professionals aren't taking their illnesses seriously.
Health officials say they are watching closely and haven't yet confirmed any illnesses related to other drugs from New England Compounding or its sister company, Ameridose, both of which recalled all products amid sterility concerns.
Developments last week, however, indicate that the scope of the outbreak could be wider than previously believed. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration reported finding a new batch of bacterial and fungal contaminants in drugs from New England Compounding. Meanwhile, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported a surge in epidural abscesses and bone infections among patients treated with three suspect lots of methylprednisolone acetate. Previously, the dominant infection had been fungal meningitis.
Dr. Diana Zuckerman, president of the patient advocacy organization National Research Center for Women & Families, said she believes more illnesses caused by contaminated drugs may be under the radar.
"This is the tip of the iceberg," Zuckerman said.
Questions about infection
Molds such as Aspergillus are common in the environment and have been known to sicken patients with weakened immune systems in rare instances. But Moody and his wife, Joy, are convinced that his fungal infections were triggered by the drugs he was given through a port.
Like hundreds of others across the country, Bret Moody got a letter telling him that during a recent hospital stay, he was treated with drugs from New England Compounding.
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