Monterey Herald

Company had history of violations

- By Richard Lardner and Jason Dearen

The company at the center of quality problems that led Johnson & Johnson to discard 15 million doses of its coronaviru­s vaccine has a string of citations from U.S. health officials for quality control problems.

Emergent BioSolutio­ns, a littleknow­n company vital to the vaccine supply chain, was a key to Johnson & Johnson’s plan to deliver 100 million doses of its vaccine to the United States by the end of May. But the Food and Drug Administra­tion repeatedly has cited Emergent for problems such as poorly trained employees, cracked vials and problems managing mold and other contaminat­ion around one of its facilities, according to records obtained by The Associated Press through the Freedom of Informatio­n Act. The records cover inspection­s at Emergent facilities since 2017.

Johnson & Johnson said Wednesday that a batch of vaccine made by Emergent at its Baltimore factory, known as Bayview, cannot be used because it did not meet quality standards. It was unclear how many doses were involved or how the problem would affect future deliveries of J&J’s vaccine. The company said in a statement it was still planning to deliver 100 million doses by the end of June and was “aiming to deliver those doses by the end of May.”

“Human errors do happen,” Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert, said Thursday in an interview on CBS’ “This Morning.” “You have checks and balances . ... That’s the

reason why the good news is that it did get picked up. As I mentioned, that’s the reason nothing from that plant has gone into anyone that we’ve administer­ed to.”

J&J locked arms with Emergent in April 2020, enlisting the lesser-known company to manufactur­e the vaccine J&J was developing with federal money. At the time, Emergent’s Bayview facility wasn’t scaled for making millions of doses of a potential COVID-19 vaccine, according to the FDA records, which describe the plant as a contract testing laboratory that “did not manufactur­e products for distributi­on.” Upgrades in technology and personnel were required before Bayview could begin making what is known as “drug substance” material for the vaccine, a twomonth process during which the required biological cells are grown.

The FDA inspected Emergent’s Bayview plant in April 2020, just as the agreement with J&J was being announced. The federal agency criticized Emergent for problems with its testing of a potential treatment for anthrax, according to the records obtained by the AP. The FDA’s lead investigat­or cited the company for failing to train employees “in the particular operations they perform as part of their function and current good manufactur­ing practices.”

On the same day, Johnson & Johnson, in a separate news release, heralded its partnershi­p with Emergent as a step toward the pharmaceut­ical giant’s goal of supplying more than 1 billion doses of the vaccine globally by the end of 2021.

But the FDA’s inspection of Emergent’s Bayview plant had faulted the company for a series of quality control shortcomin­gs, according to the records. Although the inspection was not triggered by work on a COVID-19 vaccine, the issues listed by agency inspectors stand out due to the large role Emergent would soon have to combat the pandemic.

The FDA criticized the Bayview plant for failing to ensure that electronic data generated through testing of drug ingredient­s “was protected from deletion or manipulati­on.” A closer review found 202 deletions and 543 reprocesse­d files, yet the company had not investigat­ed how those alteration­s had occurred or their possible impact, according to the records. The FDA’s lead investigat­or, Marcellinu­s Dordunoo, wrote that Emergent had not investigat­ed what he described as “data integrity concerns.”

Emergent also did not follow proper testing and lab procedures at Bayview, the FDA said, noting that “deviations from test methods are not investigat­ed, and are manually corrected days after performanc­e, with no supporting data or documented justificat­ion.”

The FDA also criticized Emergent for carelessne­ss in the handling of rejected materials in the Bayview plant. An inspector observed items in a “reject cage” that did not have reject labels, and wrote that “separate or defined areas to prevent contaminat­ion or mix-ups are deficient.”

The inspection was the most recent in a series of critical reports from the FDA about Emergent, including one following a December 2017 inspection at a plant in Canton, Massachuse­tts, in which the FDA said the company had not corrected “continued low level mold and yeast isolates” found in the facility.

In June 2018, agency investigat­ors questioned why Emergent had “an unwritten policy of not conducting routine compliance audits” at a separate plant in Baltimore, known as Camden, where an anthrax vaccine, BioThrax, is filled into vials.

FDA inspectors noted that the company’s processes there were flawed. “Your firm received 3 complaints for residue on the outside of the vials for 3 different lots,” the FDA’s inspection report said. Tests on that residue confirmed it was vaccine, according to the report.

The agency, in another 2018 inspection, noted Emergent’s ongoing problems managing contaminat­ion at the Baltimore facility where BioThrax is produced: “Procedures designed to prevent microbiolo­gical contaminat­ion of drug products purporting to be sterile are not adequately establishe­d and followed.” FDA’s inspectors also noted that Emergent staff filling vials of vaccine held “their hands directly above open vials” in a way that violated sterility safeguards.

The FDA declined repeated requests to discuss the inspection­s at Emergent’s facilities. A spokesman said the agency “cannot comment on any particular company or any potential or ongoing compliance matters.”

Emergent’s revenues skyrockete­d during the Trump administra­tion, from about $523 million in 2015 to more than $1.5 billion in 2020. Emergent has invested heavily in lobbying the federal government, according to disclosure records that show the company spent $3.6 million on lobbying in 2020 alone.

Emergent is one of about 10 companies that Johnson & Johnson is using to speed up manufactur­ing of its recently approved coronaviru­s vaccine, the company said. The Bayview factory where the tainted vaccine ingredient was found had not yet been approved by the FDA, so no vaccine in circulatio­n is affected. Emergent declined to comment.

 ?? TED S. WARREN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A box of the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine in a refrigerat­or at a clinic in Washington state.
TED S. WARREN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A box of the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine in a refrigerat­or at a clinic in Washington state.

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