Exclusive: Lilly hit by staff accusations, FDA scrutiny at COVID drug
factories
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[May 05, 2021] By
Dan Levine and Marisa Taylor
(Reuters) - Eli Lilly & Co employees have
accused a factory executive of altering documents required by government
regulators in an effort to downplay serious quality control problems at
the U.S. plant producing the drugmaker’s COVID-19 treatment, according
to an internal Lilly complaint and a source familiar with the matter.
The unsigned report, filed April 8 in Lilly’s confidential employee
complaint system and reviewed by Reuters, is the latest sign of
manufacturing problems at the drug giant. The complaint asserts that the
executive, a top quality official at the company’s factory in
Branchburg, New Jersey, rewrote findings by Lilly technical experts at
the plant, which has been under investigation by the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration, to make the conclusions appear more favorable to the
company.
The source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the findings
involved the production of drugs including Lilly’s COVID-19 therapy,
whose use in the United States is funded by the federal government. The
coronavirus antibody treatment, bamlanivimab, has been authorized by the
FDA for emergency use in combination with a second Lilly drug for mild
to moderate infections in people at high risk of severe illness.
Separately, FDA inspectors in March identified numerous manufacturing
lapses at a second Lilly facility in Indianapolis that bottles the
COVID-19 therapy and other drugs. The problems included substandard
sanitation and quality control procedures, according to a preliminary
FDA inspection report released to Reuters under open records laws. The
Indianapolis inspection findings have not been previously reported.
The troubles at the two factories, along with a succession of internal
complaints in recent years, deepen the regulatory, production and
leadership issues facing Lilly, one of the largest drugmakers in the
world. In addition to the FDA investigations, Lilly’s chief financial
officer resigned in February over what the company called “inappropriate
personal communications” with an employee. He has declined to comment in
the past and could not be reached Tuesday.
As Reuters reported in March https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-elililly-special-report/special-report-insider-alleges-eli-lilly-blocked-her-efforts-to-sound-alarms-about-u-s-drug-factory-idUSKBN2B31K5,
a human resources officer at the Branchburg factory said she was forced
out of her job after raising concerns about quality control,
record-keeping and staff shortages in the Branchburg factory. The
company has denied any retaliation against employees.
Contacted by Reuters for this story, Lilly confirmed it had received the
recent employee complaint about the Branchburg plant. The company said
it could not comment further given that an investigation was underway by
an independent third party, which it did not identify.
“Depending on the outcome of that investigation, we will take
appropriate action,” said Lilly spokeswoman Kathryn Beiser. “Lilly has
long-standing policies and procedures designed to enable - and encourage
- individuals to come forward with information about any potential
issues or concerns without fear of retribution.”
Lilly also confirmed that it had submitted a response to the FDA about
its recent inspection of the Indianapolis plant. The company declined to
share the document with Reuters, and said none of the issues identified
by the FDA at either plant has affected the quality of products released
in the marketplace.
Amid the escalating manufacturing problems, however, the Branchburg
plant has not shipped new batches of the COVID-19 drug bamlanivimab in
nearly two months, according to the employee complaint and the source
familiar with the matter. Reuters could not independently confirm that
the Branchburg plant was not releasing bamlanivimab to the Indianapolis
bottling plant or other facilities.
Lilly did not respond to questions about whether shipments have stalled
at Branchburg, though the company said it expected to meet its
production commitments for the COVID-19 treatment.
The Branchburg factory executive named in the complaint, Lydia Wible,
did not respond to requests for comment made via email and telephone. On
her behalf, Lilly said she declined to comment.
Lilly did not make Chief Executive Officer David Ricks available for
comment. Reuters found no evidence he knew of the problems described in
the complaint.
The new complaint about the Branchburg facility refers to “13 employees
involved in this investigation.” It does not identify them, saying they
fear retaliation. The source familiar with the matter said the group
that submitted the complaint comprises more than 10 employees, including
managers.
The source claimed that many of the staffers had seen the relevant
documents both before and after they were altered.
The complaint did not specify what alterations the employees believed
were made to the documents but said Wible “rewrites factual data
provided by subject matter experts to formulate responses she feels are
more beneficial.”
It is not clear whether any of the documents have been submitted to the
FDA, although the agency routinely reviews such records.
The FDA declined to answer questions on the Lilly inspections or the
employee complaint, but said "the agency takes the safety and quality of
FDA-regulated products seriously" and noted that it imposed quality
control measures when it authorized bamlanivimab.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, which oversees vaccine
and therapeutics production, did not respond to requests for comment.
Nathan Cortez, a law professor who specializes in FDA regulation at
Southern Methodist University in Texas, said the employee accusations
regarding Branchburg and Indianapolis could amplify Lilly’s problems
with regulators.
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An Eli Lilly and Company pharmaceutical manufacturing plant is
pictured at 50 ImClone Drive in Branchburg, New Jersey, March 5,
2021. REUTERS/Mike Segar
“If you have a string of manufacturing problems across multiple facilities and
you're starting to develop a not-so-great manufacturing track record, the FDA
will probably consider harder responses,” he said. Referring to the internal
complaint, he said: “If somebody is sticking their neck out, that strikes me as
a pretty big deal and evidence of some deeper problems within the company.”
DISCOMFORT AND DISMAY
The April complaint asserts that Wible, the Branchburg factory executive,
altered information provided by internal technical experts, saying she is
“solely responsible for providing written responses to the FDA” regarding the
types of quality control problems that regulators flagged.
The complaint said that Wible - who did not respond to questions from Reuters -
used “her authority to rewrite technical investigations for which she has little
or no experience.”
According to the complaint, staff members who gather information for the FDA
were concerned about presenting altered material to regulators. They “are
uncomfortable and do not feel confident in defending the reformulated responses
in the event they are called upon by the FDA,” the complaint said.
The complaint also expressed impatience with company leaders.
“How long is it going to take for the company to pay attention and do something
about this?” it said, referring to the accusations against Wible. “We are all
working very hard to meet the commitments to the FDA and cannot do so under
these conditions.”
The complaint said Wible had, prior to recently altering the records required by
the FDA, provided “fabricated” information including “fictitious numbers” to a
Branchburg human resources investigator looking into potential manufacturing
lapses.
Asked by Reuters about the matter, former human resources investigator Amrit
Mula confirmed that she had concluded through an internal inquiry in 2018 that
Wible had given her fabricated information. Mula said she was looking into
unsanitary conditions in a warehouse, as well as information about the improper
disposal of quality-control records for Trulicity, a blockbuster diabetes drug
then made at the plant.
Reuters reported in March that Mula claimed to have identified serious
violations of FDA manufacturing rules at the plant and to have been forced out
of the company in early 2019. Mula has since sought compensation from Lilly,
arguing the company retaliated against her for raising legitimate concerns as
part of her job.
Senior executives at Lilly headquarters in Indianapolis, including Leanne
Hickman, vice president of quality, knew about the alleged fabrications and
retaliation and protected Wible, doing nothing to address the problems,
according to the complaint.
Hickman did not respond to requests for comment conveyed by email and telephone.
On her behalf, Lilly said she declined to comment.
In November 2019, roughly eight months after Mula’s departure, FDA inspectors
showed up at the Branchburg plant for a routine inspection and cited some of the
same problems Mula said she had repeatedly flagged to her bosses. The
preliminary FDA report found that quality control data on various manufacturing
processes had been deleted and not appropriately audited.
The FDA red-flagged the problems as “Official Action Indicated,” or OAI, which
is its most serious category of violation. If not addressed, an OAI can lead to
a prohibition on the sale of drugs from a facility, regulatory experts say. The
FDA has not taken further public action.
Inspectors returned in July https://www.reuters.com/article/health-coronavirus-elililly/exclusive-fda-faults-quality-control-at-lilly-plant-making-trump-touted-covid-drug-idUSKBN26Z0CH
and found several more problems, including that the company failed to properly
investigate quality-control problems to prevent recurrence and that batches of
drugs had been discarded because of manufacturing mistakes.
In October, the Trump administration ordered $375 million worth of bamlanivimab
and shortly afterward authorized its use on an emergency basis to help curb the
pandemic. Bamlanivimab is combined with a second Lilly drug, called etesevimab,
to treat COVID-19.
‘A LOT OF WORK TO DO’
A condition of the emergency authorization was that an outside auditor inspect
batches of bamlanivimab to ensure they met FDA standards. Lilly and the FDA have
not responded to questions from Reuters about whether this requirement was
carried out.
Lilly said in March that its combination antibody therapy reduced the risk of
hospitalization and death by 87% in a study of more than 750 high-risk COVID-19
patients.
Around he same time, the FDA inspected the Indianapolis plant, which receives
the kinds of injectable drugs manufactured in New Jersey, fills them into vials
and syringes, and distributes them to customers.
Preliminary FDA reports, which are partially redacted, show inspectors found
that procedures to ensure certain areas remain sterile were substandard and that
Lilly failed to thoroughly investigate drug batches that had failed quality
control tests. In addition, when vials from outside vendors were discarded as
defective, the company failed to thoroughly investigate.
“The FDA found serious concerns on multiple fronts,” said Steven Lynn, a former
head of the FDA’s Office of Manufacturing and Product Quality, who reviewed the
inspection report for Reuters. “Lilly has a lot of work to do.”
(Dan Levine reported from San Francisco and Marisa Taylor from Washington, D.C.
Editing by Michele Gershberg and Julie Marquis)
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