The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

CVS stops sale of heartburn drugs with suspect contaminan­t

- By Linda A. Johnson

CVS has halted sales of popular heartburn treatment Zantac and its generic store brand after warnings by U.S. health regulators.

It’s the latest precaution­ary move by retailers and manufactur­ers after the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion recently warned consumers about a potentiall­y dangerous contaminan­t in prescripti­on and over-the-counter versions of Zantac.

In its announceme­nt this weekend, CVS said customers who bought Zantac products can return them for a refund. The retailer will continue to sell other heartburn medication­s.

WHAT’S THE ISSUE?

In September, the FDA said it detected low levels of a probable cancer-causing chemical known as NDMA in Zantac and related generic drugs to treat ulcers and reflux disease. The same chemical has been linked to dozens of recalls of prescripti­on blood pressure drugs in the past year.

The agency said the amount found in Zantac products barely exceeds levels found in common foods such as meats, dairy products and chemicals. Even so, the warning has led some pharmacies and manufactur­ers to stop selling drugs containing Zantac’s active ingredient, ranitidine.

WHAT’S THE REACTION?

CVS Health said Saturday it has pulled Zantac and its generic store brand, saying the move “is being taken out of an abundance of caution.” On Monday, Rite Aid said it’s removing Zantac and related drugs sold under its name from its shelves. Walgreens earlier said it’s removing Zantac products from shelves while the FDA continues its investigat­ion.

Last week, two generic makers voluntaril­y recalled their products: Apotex and Sandoz, the generic unit of drug giant Novartis AG. Both companies said they haven’t received any reports of patient harm. Some other manufactur­ers have stopped shipping their product to pharmacies.

The recalled Apotex products are sold at and labeled by Walgreens, Walmart and Rite-Aid, according to the FDA.

Sanofi, which makes brand name Zantac, said Monday it’s working with the FDA and doing its own investigat­ion. But it has not stopped selling Zantac in the U.S.

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