The Mercury News

FDA chief struggles to explain response on baby formula

Before House subcommitt­ee, official lays out series of setbacks

- By Matthew Perrone

WASHINGTON >> The head of the Food and Drug Administra­tion faced bipartisan fury from House lawmakers Wednesday over months of delays investigat­ing problems at the nation's largest baby formula plant that prompted an ongoing shortage.

FDA Commission­er Robert Califf laid out a series of setbacks in congressio­nal testimony that slowed his agency's response, including a COVID-19 outbreak at the plant and a whistleblo­wer complaint that didn't reach FDA leadership because it was apparently lost in the mail.

Califf testified before a House subcommitt­ee investigat­ing the shortage, which has snowballed into a national political controvers­y and forced the U.S. military to begin airlifting supplies from Europe.

The shortage mostly stems from Abbott's Michigan plant, which the FDA shut down in February due to contaminat­ion issues. Under fire from Congress, parents and the media, Califf gave the first detailed account Wednesday of why his agency took months to inspect and shutter the plant despite learning of potential problems as early as September.

The FDA's response was: “Too slow and there were decisions that were suboptimal along the way,” Califf told lawmakers.

The FDA and President Joe Biden face mounting pollical pressure to explain why they didn't intervene earlier to try and head off the supply crisis.

“Why did it take an onslaught of national media attention for the Biden administra­tion to act with a sense of urgency required to address an infant formula shortage?” asked Rep. Morgan Griffith, R-Virginia, the committee's ranking Republican.

Califf said the agency had been trying to monitor formula supplies since 2020 when COVID-related disruption­s first emerged, but has limited visibility into industry supply chains.

The House panel also heard from three formula manufactur­ers, including a top Abbott Nutrition executive who apologized to parents for the shortage.

“We let you down,” said Abbott vice president Christophe­r Calamari. “We are deeply sorry.”

FDA staff began honing in on Abbott's plant last fall while tracking several bacterial infections in infants who had consumed formula from the facility. The four cases occurred between September and January, leading to hospitaliz­ation and two deaths.

The FDA planned to begin inspecting the Sturgis,

Michigan, plant on Dec. 30, according to Califf's testimony. But Abbott warned that about a dozen of its employees had tested positive for COVID-19 and requested a delay. As a result, the FDA didn't begin its inspection until Jan. 31.

After detecting positive samples of a rare-but-dangerous bacteria in multiple parts of the plant, the FDA closed the facility and Abbott announced a massive recall of its formula on Feb. 17.

“We knew that ceasing plant operations would create supply problems but we had no choice given the insanitary conditions,” Califf said in opening testimony.

Abbott and the FDA have reached an agreement to reopen the plant next week, under which the company must regularly undergo outside safety audits.

Califf also struggled to explain the FDA's monthslong timeline in responding to an October whistleblo­wer complaint alleging numerous safety violations at Abbott's plant, including employees falsifying records.

Several FDA staffers reviewed the complaint in late October when it was sent to a regional FDA office, but an interview didn't take place until two months later, in part due to the whistleblo­wer's scheduling conflicts.

Senior FDA officials eventually received the complaint via email, but not until February due to “an isolated failure in FDA's mailroom, likely due to COVID-19 staffing issues,” according to the FDA testimony. A mailed copy addressed to then-acting commission­er Dr. Janet Woodcock has still not been located.

Political outrage over the shortage has landed squarely on the FDA and Califf, the only administra­tion official who has testified thus far on the issue. The problems have escalated into a political firestorm for the White House, which has invoked the Defense Production Act and emergency flights to shore up supplies.

Califf also faced questions about why his agency didn't anticipate the shortage and alert other government agencies sooner. The FDA contacted the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e about Feb. 11., just days before Abbott's recall, according to FDA's timeline.

The FDA has requested new authoritie­s, funding and staff to track supply chain data that could have helped get ahead of the problem, Califf said, but has not received them from Congress.

Several lawmakers raised longstandi­ng concerns that the FDA's food program — which oversees most U.S. foods except meat, poultry and eggs — is underfunde­d and needs restructur­ing.

The program has a convoluted leadership structure in which there is a director of FDA's Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition and a separate deputy commission­er for “food policy and response.” The deputy commission­er has more of a safety focus, but has no direct authority over food center staff nor field staff who inspect company plants.

Both officials testified Wednesday, along with Califf.

When Rep. Nanette Diaz-Barragan, D-Calif., asked who is in charge of food safety, Califf and food center director Susan Mayne gave extended answers, describing different roles and responsibi­lities.

“I don't think there's one person that is responsibl­e,” Diaz-Barragan responded. “I just think it goes to show there needs to be restructur­ing and it needs to be more clear who's ultimately responsibl­e.”

Later Wednesday afternoon, Abbott's Calamari told lawmakers his company plans to build extra capacity and redundanci­es into its supply chain to avoid future disruption­s. After the company restarts production next month it will be able to produce more formula than before the recall, he noted.

“We're going to learn from this. We're going to get better as a result of this,” Calamari said.

Executives from Reckitt and Gerber also testified on their efforts to boost production.

 ?? KEVIN WOLF — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Food and Drug Administra­tion Commission­er Robert Califf testifies via video during a House Commerce Oversight and Investigat­ions subcommitt­ee hybrid hearing on the nationwide baby formula shortage on Wednesday in Washington.
KEVIN WOLF — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Food and Drug Administra­tion Commission­er Robert Califf testifies via video during a House Commerce Oversight and Investigat­ions subcommitt­ee hybrid hearing on the nationwide baby formula shortage on Wednesday in Washington.
 ?? ERIC GAY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Shelves typically stocked with baby formula sit mostly empty at a store in San Antonio on Tuesday.
ERIC GAY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Shelves typically stocked with baby formula sit mostly empty at a store in San Antonio on Tuesday.

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