Ranbaxy Chairman Une speaks during a news conference in New Delhi (B Mathur Reuters, REUTERS / April 25, 2012)
Indian drugmaker Ranbaxy Laboratories Ltd has recalled
its generic version of Pfizer Inc's cholesterol-lowering drug Lipitor in the
United States after certain batches were found to contain glass particles. Ranbaxy's
U.S. subsidiary, Ranbaxy Pharmaceuticals Inc, said the recall affects certain
lots of 10-, 20- and 40-milligram doses of the drug, known generically as
atorvastatin calcium. The 80-milligram dosage is not affected.
The company is conducting an investigation, which it
expects will take two weeks. It did not report any injuries connected to the
tainted pills and did not say how the problem was discovered. The recall could
cause shortages of the drug in the United States, analysts said. Ranbaxy, the
first company to introduce generic Lipitor after Pfizer's patent expired in
November 2011, controls about 60 percent of the market, according Ross Muken,
an analyst at ISI Group LLC. "Given its dominant share of this high-volume
drug, we are certain to see supply shortages over the next two weeks,"
Muken said. The near-term impact is likely to be felt most by retail pharmacies
and more modestly by wholesalers, he added.
The recall is the latest in a series of manufacturing
problems at Ranbaxy, which is operating under heightened scrutiny following a
long-running dispute with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. In 2008 the
FDA banned the company from importing about 30 drugs after it found
manufacturing deficiencies at two of the company's facilities in India. In 2009
the U.S. government accused Ranbaxy of falsifying data used in drug
applications.
Last December, Ranbaxy agreed to make changes to its
manufacturing plants in the United States and India. And it said it would set
aside $500 million to resolve any potential civil or criminal charges stemming
from an investigation by the U.S. Department of Justice. Under a proposed
settlement earlier this year, Ranbaxy agreed to engage a third party to conduct
a review of its facilities, implement procedures to ensure data integrity in
its marketing applications, and ensure it meets good manufacturing practices.
During its first six months on the market, when it
enjoyed marketing exclusivity, atorvastatin generated sales of nearly $600
million for Ranbaxy, according to Bhagwan Singh Chaudhary, a research associate
at the brokerage IndiaNivesh. "The (recall) will impact the company's
credibility," said Chaudhary. "A recall suggests corrective measures
suggested by the U.S. FDA are not being implemented."
Other drugmakers, including Indian rival Dr. Reddy's
Laboratories Ltd, have launched their own versions of Lipitor, and the market
has become more competitive. In 2008, Japan's Daiichi Sankyo Co acquired a
majority stake in Ranbaxy in a deal valued at $4.2 billion. Shares of Ranbaxy,
which is valued at $3.93 billion, fell 3.3 pct to 496 rupees in Mumbai.
Source: Chicago Tribune
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