U.S.
FDA warns Abbott Labs over heart device problems
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[April 14, 2017] (Reuters)
- The U.S. Food and Drug Administration
issued a warning letter to Abbott Laboratories, citing manufacturing
flaws with a range of cardiovascular devices acquired with its purchase
of St. Jude Medical in January for $25 billion.
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The letter, dated April 12 and made public on Thursday, sent
Abbott's shares down 2 percent to $42.61.
The FDA, which said the company failed to disclose at least one
death associated with one of the devices, said an inspection of the
company's facility in Sylmar, California, raised questions about the
safety of several implantable defibrillators and its Merlin@home
monitor, which allows doctors to care remotely for patients with
cardiac devices.
The FDA investigation showed that lithium batteries in the devices
were draining prematurely and that the company had "underestimated
the occurrence of the hazardous situation."
Abbott said in a statement it has a "strong history and commitment
to product safety and quality." It said the FDA's inspection took
place in February and that Abbott responded on March 13 describing
corrective actions it was taking.
"We take these matters seriously, continue to make progress on our
corrective actions, will closely review FDA's warning letter, and
are committed to fully addressing FDA's concerns," the company said.
The FDA said Abbott had provided implementation dates for several
corrective actions but failed to provide evidence that the actions
had actually been implemented.
Analysts said the FDA may now delay approval of new devices that can
be used inside an MRI machine that the company had expected to see
approved by the end of the year.
That could help rivals Medtronic Plc, which has such devices on the
market and Boston Scientific Corp which expects to launch similar
devices in the fourth quarter.
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"These two companies stand to benefit in the event Abbott's
approvals are delayed," Glenn Novarro, an analyst at RBC Capital
Markets, said in a research note.
The affected devices, known as implantable cardioverter
defibrillators (ICDs) and Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy
Defibrillators (CRT-Ds) help pace slow heart rhythms and slow
dangerously fast rhythms.
In October St. Jude said it would recall certain models due to
reports of battery failure caused by deposits of lithium forming
within the battery and causing a short circuit.
In its letter, the FDA said the company repeatedly concluded that
the cause of premature depletion "could not be determined" even
though the company's supplier had provided evidence that it was due
to lithium deposits, known as lithium cluster bridging.
(Reporting by Toni Clarke in Washington; Editing by Bernard Orr and
James Dalgleish)
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