Thursday, January 31, 2013


DITORIAL

A Brief History of FDA Compounding Oversight

Stanford T. Shulman, MD
  • Pediatric Annals
  • January 2013 - Volume 42 · Issue 1: 2-3
  • DOI: 10.3928/00904481-20121221-01
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This issue highlights a series of challenging pediatric dermatology cases organized by Sarah L. Chamlin, MD, an outstanding pediatric dermatologist and the dermatology section editor of Pediatric Annals. Be sure to look at each case and formulate your opinion before finding out the answer!

Fungal Meningitis Outbreak

You’ve likely heard the news about the disastrous outbreak of fungal meningitis associated with the intrathecal injection of methylprednisolone acetate for adults with chronic back pain.1,2 The contaminated lots of steroid were compounded at a Massachusetts facility called the New England Compounding Center (NECC) and shipped to a wide area of the US.3 The vast majority of the more than 500 patients (including 36 deaths) in 19 states were infected with the rare fungus Exserohilum rostratum. Fungal contamination of unopened compounded drug vials was documented.2
The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has the authority to regulate drug manufacturing, but oversight of the compounding of specific preparations for individual patient use has fallen into a gray area between federal oversight of manufacturing and state oversight of the practice of pharmacy and medicine (thus, we have state medical licenses).3
In 2002, the US Supreme Court ruled unconstitutional a law passed by Congress to enable FDA oversight of large-scale compounding. The FDA was able to salvage many aspects of that law in its policy guide, and it appears that NECC violated some of these policies.3 This entire complex story is recounted in detail in the Nov. 22, 2012 issue of The New England Journal of Medicine3 and in two original reports in the subsequent two issues.1,2

Historical Highlights of Compounding

Originally established in 1906, the FDA has an interesting history. I recently met a very alert and healthy 82-year-old woman who was treated at Chicago’s Children’s Memorial Hospital in 1939 at the age of 8 for severe pneumococcal meningitis, and I was able to review her hospital records from that episode. She was treated with pyridine sulfanilamide and injections of rabbit type-specific pneumococcal antiserum, with an amazingly positive outcome. This is relevant because the FDA had its oversight mandate broadened in direct response to the 1937 Elixir Sulfanilamide disaster. This was the first available antibiotic to be highly effective against some infections, and it was used safely in tablet and powder form. When there was demand for a liquid formulation, the manufacturer, S.E. Massengill Co., developed a pleasant raspberry-flavored product that unfortunately used diethylene glycol, the primary ingredient in antifreeze, as a solvent. In all, there were 105 “elixir”-related deaths across 15 states. (The chemist responsible for the mixture, Harold Watkins, PhD, later committed suicide.)4
At that time, there was no legal requirement that medications be tested for toxicity, and the results were catastrophic. As a result, Congress passed the 1938 Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act, which increased the FDA’s authority to regulate drugs and required them to be safe and properly labeled. Amazingly, proof of drug efficacy was not a requirement until 1962, partly in response to the thalidomide tragedy in which a host of birth defects were linked to the drug.
Hopefully, the current tragedy will lead to tighter controls over the compounding industry, helping to safeguard patients throughout the US.
Source found here

Health official touts pharmacy regulations - TimesDaily.com

Health official touts pharmacy regulations - TimesDaily.com

Pharmacy board: More inspectors needed for sterile compounding

Jan. 31, 2013 5:23 PM, 

Members of the state pharmacy board called for more inspectors on Thursday amid discussions of new rules and potential legislation related to the regulation of sterile compounding.
Currently the board has five inspectors to oversee 1,905 pharmacies. Lawmakers, pharmacy experts and the board have talked in recent months about adding regulations of sterile compounding, the practice of combining multiple drugs for injection. In September, tainted compounded drugs led to a national outbreak of fungal meningitis that has stricken 693 people and led to 45 deaths.
“Until we (add more inspectors), we accomplish nothing,” board member Joyce McDaniel said.
Department of Health Assistant Commissioner for Legislative Affairs Valerie Nagoshiner discussed possible legislation related to sterile compounding that the department may pursue this legislative session. Most notably, the department is considering a bill that would require a separate license for pharmacies that practice sterile compounding.
The purpose of the separate license would be so that officials could get a handle on how many such sterile compounders have a state license. Prior to the outbreak, the board of pharmacy and the Health Department did not know the answer to that question.
Pharmacy board members said legislation could be unnecessary, because the board could require pharmacies to alert the board during the application process if they practice sterile compounding.
At least 352 pharmacies practice sterile compounding in Tennessee, according to the preliminary results of a survey released earlier this month by the pharmacy board.
Nagoshiner also discussed legislation that would allow the Health Department commissioner to suspend a pharmacy from practicing sterile compounding. The commissioner already has the power to shut down nursing homes under an emergency suspension.
But board member Kevin Eidson worried that the commissioner was not a pharmacist and may lack the expertise to make such a call. Eidson, and other board members, suggested that the board already has the power to take such emergency action.
The tainted drugs were linked to Massachusetts-based New England Compounding Center. Eidson said too much time passed — 33 days — before the Tennessee health department gave the pharmacy board the information it needed to take action against NECC and its lead pharmacist, Barry J. Cadden.
“I feel very comfortable about what’s going on in Tennessee (in terms of sterile compounding),” Eidson said. “I’m not comfortable with what’s going on in other states.”
Board president Buddy Stephens said the board would like to inspect each of its pharmacies once per year, and sterile compounders possibly as often as once every six months.
But to accomplish these goals, more inspectors are needed. And those inspectors need to be properly trained regarding sterile compounding practices. Stephens said the board needed approval from the health department to create the new inspector positions.
He instructed the board of pharmacy staff to investigate how much licensure fees would need to increase in order to inspect each of its licensees, including those that operate out of state. At a legislative hearing on sterile compounding earlier this week, the state pharmacy association expressed support for such an increase if necessary.
Already the Iowa pharmacy board has signed off on inspecting its out-of-state pharmacies, and Stephens said Tennessee should consider following suit. Iowa will use the National Association of Boards of Pharmacies to conduct its out-of-state inspections.
Contact Nate Rau at 615-259-8094 or nrau@tennessean.com. Follow him Twitter @tnnaterau.
source found here

CDER Agenda Foreshadows Release of Guidances Long Sought by Industry