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Archive for March, 2010

The Lilly heist and the need for e-pedigree

Friday, March 19th, 2010

Whether you think we need more evidence that drug prices have become outrageous or not, the following blog describes the theft of an estimated $75 million in prescription drug from an Eli Lilly warehouse this week (posted yesterday on POSTSCRIPT.)  And stay tuned for details on prescription drug reforms that promote access and affordability in the health reform bill released yesterday. 

The Lilly heist and the need for e-pedigree

March 18th, 2010

The astonishing theft of $75 million worth of antidepressants and other drugs through the roof of an Eli Lilly distribution warehouse in Connecticut earlier this week is just the latest and most acrobatic incident in a rash of prescription drug theft, and highlights the importance of establishing better tracking of drugs in the pharmaceutical supply chain. According to Freightwatch, a group that tracks cargo security, reported drug theft has quadrupled in the last four years. Last year, nearly $200 million worth of prescription drugs were stolen in the U.S. There were five pharma thefts in the month of February alone.

The case highlights the need for a start-to-finish, tamper-proof drug pedigree on every prescription drug that’s sold. As the Secure Pharma Supply Chain blog wrote, “the issue of pharmaceutical cargo theft energizes the need for material screening of products within the supply chain, from manufacturer to dispenser, to properly protect consumers everywhere.”

Right now, prescription drugs that go missing (through the roof or otherwise) are often exempt from having a pedigree once they reach a hospital or pharmacy because of regulatory gaps. Under current federal and state regulations, many parties are excluded from pedigree requirements – authorized distributors, for one—so a drug’s paper trail ends once it passes through their hands. Stolen drugs, which may be improperly stored or tampered with, can be sold back to authorized distributors, and pharmacies and hospitals that buy from them have no way of knowing of the risks.

Another problem is that it’s a paper trail—papers can be easily swapped forged or lost.  And the documents that are required are for whole lots of drugs, making them meaningless in issues of partial-lot theft and resale we’ve seen occur (like the insulin units stolen from North Carolina cargo truck and found on Texas shelves months later.)

One solution would be to require an e-pedigree, an electronic barcode or radio tag on every bottle or package of prescription drugs, making it possible to track each stop along the supply chain from the factory to the medicine cabinet.  California is the only state to have an e-pedigree requirement, but implementation of that law has been delayed till 2015. A federal e-pedigree law has been proposed by Representatives Buyer and Matheson, and would be a more sensible solution for a globalized and interstate industry.

 

–Kate Petersen, PostScript blogger

Drug Safety: A Duet

Friday, March 12th, 2010

(The following blog was posted yesterday on Community Catalyst’s Postscript blog. It highlights an exchange between FDA Deputy Commissioner Joshua Sharfstein an Congressman Dingell concerning the need for increased FDA authority and resources to effectively regulate drug safety.)

Drug Safety: A Duet

March 11th, 2010

Yesterday, the House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Health heard from FDA Deputy Commissioner Joshua Sharfstein on the safety of the drug supply and current agency practices to ensure the safety of marketed drugs.

Sharfstein, who has been a strong advocate for drug safety, both at the agency and previously  as health commissioner in Baltimore, made a forceful case for what FDA needs to keep drugs safe: “FDA needs additional tools to move our oversight capabilities into the 21st century.  FDA needs to access regulatory information quickly, hold all parties responsible for the quality of products in the supply chain, and have reasonable and reliable options for enforcement,” he said.

The hearing was notable for the bipartisan consensus that securing the safety of the drug supply is a national priority with high stakes, and unanimous agreement that the FDA’s ability to ensure that safety must be shored up. It convincingly framed drug safety as an equally urgent next step to a food safety measure that passed the House by a wide margin last year.

But perhaps the hearing’s most compelling arguments for a safer drug supply came in this stage-worthy exchange between Sharfstein (JS) and Chairman Emeritus John Dingell (JD), who has worked to support the agency’s drug safety efforts for much of his recent career.

JD: Dr. Sharfstein, I want you to understand these are friendly questions. I want yes or no answers. You are familiar with the heparin crisis, which caused 81 American deaths. Does FDA currently have the adequate resources, personnel, and authorities to prevent another heparin crisis?

JS: No.

JD: Do you have the ability to control the safety of imported pharmaceuticals?

JS: Not to the extent we’d like.

JD: Do you have the authority and resources to address the safety of components being now imported into this country?

JS: No, not to the extent we’d like.

JD: Do you have authorities and resources to see to it that good manufacturing practices (GMPs) are properly observed overseas?

JS: Not to the extent we’d like.

JD: Would you please submit to the committee the number of people that you have at the different ports to ensure the safety and the inspection of pharmaceuticals coming into this country, and also would you give the number you need to see that this is done. Please submit that for the record.

[JS assents]

JD: Do you have adequate authority to keep out unsafe drug shipments at the border?

JS: No.

JD: Do you have authority to require manufacturers to ensure the safety of their supply chain?

JS: No.

JD: Do you have the authority to see to it that GMP are observed in this country on both food and drugs, and abroad? Yes or no?

JS: No, not to the extent we’d like.


JD : Do you have adequate authority to require mandatory drug recalls?

JS: No.

JD: Do you need that authority?

JS: We would like it that authority, yes.

JD: Would you like it or do you need it?

JS: I’d say we need it.

JD: [refers to the Food and Drug Administration Globalization Act of 2009 and its cosponsors] [FDAGA] would give you significant authorities to address your current lack of capabilities?

JS: That legislation has very important elements, yes.

JD: It would also give you the [financial resources] you need by enabling you to collect fees from both manufacturers of food and pharmaceuticals? Is that right?

JS: It does have that provision, yes.

JD: And you can do that both at home and abroad, is that right?

JS: I believe so, yes.

JD: Are those resources and fees included in your budget submissions to the Congress?

JS: For food it is.

JD: How about pharmaceuticals?

JS: I don’t believe so, no.

JD: Now it’s a curious situation I’ve observed, that you are in the awkward place at FDA of having somebody be able to bring unsafe foods into the United States, and you can’t catch them at the point of entry. But you also have the problem that if you do catch them, you don’t have authority to seize, impound or to destroy. Is that right?

JS: Yes.

JD: So you send them back out?

JS: I believe so. Often that’s what happens.

JD: And they then often bring them back in, through another point of entry?

JS: I think they can try, yes.

JD: Do you have that same problem with pharmaceuticals?

JS: Yes.

JD: So that problem exists in both places. So you have problems with unsafe commodities being brought in—foods and pharmaceuticals. You also have some that are over-aged, improperly stored, contaminated, filthy, improperly packaged. Counterfeit. And you also have some that are full of inert substances, you mentioned talcum powder…Do you have authority to deal with those?

JS: We have some authorities. But not–

JD [interrupts] Do you have enough?

JS: We don’t have enough.

JD: As proven by heparin.

JS: Yes, in part.

JD: And you have coming into this country from China on a fairly regular basis—and from Mexico and other places—unsafe food and pharmaceuticals. I can recall mushrooms. I can recall berries. I can recall tomatoes and jalapeno peppers. I can recall the heparin scare. And a large number of others. This is an ongoing and continuous problem, is it not?

JS: Absolutely.

JD: And you lack the Congressional support, both in authority and money, to do the job that you need to do to protect the American people? Isn’t that right?

JS: Well, we very much want to do more.

JD: I don’t want you to be afraid to say that we haven’t given you  the authority you need—

JS:  No we want more authority—

JD: —If it’s the truth, because we’re going to try to get it for you.

–Kate Petersen, PostScript blogger