U.S. FDA says India-made eye drop linked to some infections, blindness
and one death
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[February 04, 2023]
NEW DELHI (Reuters) -The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
has warned against using an eye drop made in India that has been linked
to the outbreak of a drug-resistant bacteria leading to adverse events
in at least 55 patients in the United States including infections,
blindness and one death.
The agency said on Thursday that Artificial Tears eye drop manufactured
by India's Global Pharma Healthcare Pvt Ltd has a potential bacterial
contamination and the company has violated current good manufacturing
practices.
Global Pharma Healthcare, based in the southern city of Chennai, said on
Wednesday it had issued a voluntary recall at the consumer level of
unexpired lots of the eye drop, which was distributed in the United
States by EzriCare LLC and Delsam Pharma.
Global Pharma Healthcare did not immediately respond to a Reuters
request seeking comment on the FDA statement.
EzriCare said in a statement on Wednesday that it had stopped further
distribution and sale of the eye drop, and it was not aware of any
testing that "definitively links" the bacterial outbreak to the product.
The company has removed the products as requested, a Delsam Pharma
spokesperson said, adding that the products had a safety seal top and
were not associated with customer cases.
An Indian government source told Reuters on Friday that the federal and
state drug regulators have sent a team to a manufacturing plant near
Chennai contracted by Global Pharma Healthcare.
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Signage is seen outside of the Food and
Drug Administration (FDA) headquarters in White Oak, Maryland, U.S.,
August 29, 2020. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly/File Photo
"It is a contract manufacturing
plant supplying through others to the U.S. market," the source said,
adding that this specific drug was not sold in India.
The incident comes after the deaths of at least 70 children in
Gambia and 19 children in Uzbekistan last year were linked to
India-made cough syrups, which has dented the country's image as the
"pharmacy of the world".
The FDA said it was collaborating with the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC) and state and local health departments
to investigate a multistate outbreak involving a rare, extensively
drug-resistant bacteria.
It said that as of Jan. 31, the CDC had identified 55 patients in 12
states with infections linked to the use of Artificial Tears
distributed by EzriCare, it said.
"Associated adverse events include hospitalization, one death with
bloodstream infection, and permanent vision loss from eye
infections," the FDA said.
(Reporting by Shivam Patel and Krishna N Das in New Delhi,Editing by
William Maclean, Frances Kerry and Anil D'Silva)
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