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The president of Sierra Pre-Filled, Dushyant Patel, said the company is working with the CDC and the Food and Drug Administration and has voluntarily recalled the implicated lot. "There's nothing out there anymore," Patel said.
The affected lot is 070926H, Srinivasan said. He said the CDC is working to make sure doctors are alerted about the contamination and that more cases could surface.
"Our highest priority is to ensure that all of those cases that occur are identified," he said.
Patients who think they used affected syringes should contact their doctors, Srinivasan said.
He said bacteria were found in fluid from the pre-filled syringes but it is uncertain if the original contamination was in the heparin, the saline used to dilute the drug, or the syringes themselves.
"We'll be working to perform genetic fingerprinting on the bacteria to confirm a link between bacteria in the syringes and the case patients," Srinivasan said.
Heparin is the same drug linked to overdoses accidentally given to actor Dennis Quaid's newborn twins. In that case the heparin was made by Deerfield-based Baxter Healthcare Corp. The twins appeared to be doing well, a lawyer for the Quaids said earlier this month.
Patel said the heparin in his company's pre-filled syringes comes from a different company.
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