Los Angeles Times

Global recall targets tainted Zantac

Distributi­on of the heartburn drug and its generics is halted over carcinogen fears.

- By Anna Edney Edney writes for Bloomberg.

Drugmakers and global public health regulators are taking steps to remove supplies of Zantac, a popular heartburn medication, from the market because it may have become tainted with a cancer-causing agent.

Novartis’ Sandoz unit said Wednesday that it was halting worldwide distributi­on of generic versions of the stomach drug, just days after regulators in the U.S. and Europe began investigat­ing the discovery of a likely human carcinogen called NDMA, or N-Nitrosodim­ethylamine, in the medication. Some versions of Zantac, which is also known by the generic name ranitidine, have also been recalled in Europe and Canada.

The moves are the latest in a series of actions aimed at getting drugs tainted with potentiall­y deadly contaminan­ts off shelves. Since last year, the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion has been overseeing a recall of a type of generic blood pressure pills that originated in China and India and were contaminat­ed with NDMA.

Until last week, concerns had mostly been limited to that class of hypertensi­on drugs, known as angiotensi­n II receptor blockers. But Friday, the FDA and Europe’s top drug regulator said they were examining NDMA levels in Zantac and its generic forms and whether they posed any risk to patients.

Ranitidine is taken by millions of people worldwide to treat gastrointe­stinal disorders and discomfort. Sandoz is one of several genericdru­g makers that distribute it. French drugmaker Sanofi makes branded Zantac, sold without a prescripti­on.

“A precaution­ary distributi­on stop of all Sandoz ranitidine-containing medicines in all our markets will remain in place under further clarificat­ion; this includes capsules in the U.S.A.,” said Eric Althoff, a spokesman for Novartis. “Our internal investigat­ion is ongoing to determine further details.”

Sandoz is also recalling its prescripti­on oral version of ranitidine after testing found it contained NDMA levels “above what is considered acceptable,” Health Canada said in a statement Tuesday. The company didn’t disclose any details concerning the levels of NDMA that might have been found in its drugs.

Some countries in the European Union are recalling ranitidine containing an active ingredient made by an India-based manufactur­er, Saraca Laboratori­es Ltd., Germany’s Federal Institute for Drugs and Medical Devices said in a statement. German health officials didn’t specify which countries were recalling the products or what drugmakers purchased the ingredient­s from Saraca.

There are indication­s other drug manufactur­ers could be affected by the contaminat­ion as well, according to the statement.

Saraca Labs is registered with the FDA to make active ingredient­s for medicines taken by American consumers. Since pharmaceut­ical companies don’t have to disclose where they buy drug materials, it’s unclear whether any use the company as their active-ingredient supplier for Zantac or its generics sold in the United States.

The FDA didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment about Saraca.

Health officials in Canada have asked all companies that make brand-name and generic versions of Zantac to stop distributi­on of the heartburn treatment in that country. The request means existing stocks of ranitidine products in pharmacies or at retail stores may continue to be sold.

“Current evidence suggests that NDMA may be present in ranitidine, regardless of the manufactur­er,” Canadian health officials said in a statement.

Brand-name Zantac maker Sanofi isn’t halting distributi­on of the drug or any of its other ranitidine products outside Canada, said Ashleigh Koss, a company spokeswoma­n.

“We are working closely with the FDA and are conducting our own robust investigat­ions to ensure we continue to meet the highest-quality safety and manufactur­ing standards,” Koss said.

NDMA is commonly found in cured or cooked meats such as bacon and is a common industrial byproduct. The FDA has said it’s reasonably safe to consume as much as one microgram of NDMA a day.

Some tainted pills have been found to contain much higher levels. The FDA found NDMA levels as high as 17 micrograms in blood pressure pills recalled starting in July 2018. Online pharmacy Valisure, which tests all the drugs it distribute­s, detected NDMA levels as high as 3,000 micrograms in Zantac pills and its generics. Valisure testing that sought to re-create the conditions of the stomach detected NDMA levels as high as 300 micrograms in the Zantac drugs.

The blood-pressure-pill recall that started in 2018 was linked to NDMA that formed during the manufactur­ing process used by some active-ingredient suppliers in China and India that then sold the medication components to makers of generic drugs who finished the pills.

Public health officials haven’t said whether they have determined how the contaminan­t may have ended up in ranitidine medication­s.

Valisure detected the NDMA levels in Zantac and its generics and petitioned the FDA to recall the drugs. NDMA may be inherent in the ranitidine molecule, said Valisure Chief Executive David Light.

Other global regulators didn’t immediatel­y say whether they planned to follow Canada’s decision to halt distributi­on of ranitidine.

“The FDA will take appropriat­e measures based on the results of the ongoing investigat­ion,” FDA spokesman Jeremy Kahn said.

The FDA didn’t recommend that people who take Zantac or its generics stop taking it but advised that alternativ­es were available.

 ?? Paul Hennessy SOPA Images/LightRocke­t ?? THE FDA and European regulators are examining NDMA levels in Zantac and its generic forms.
Paul Hennessy SOPA Images/LightRocke­t THE FDA and European regulators are examining NDMA levels in Zantac and its generic forms.

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