Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

FDA flags Torrent’s US plant for manufactur­ing violations

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NEW DELHI: The American health regulator has pulled up Torrent Pharmaceut­icals’ US-based subsidiary for violations of good manufactur­ing practices, including lack of properly designed equipment and packing material.

In a warning letter issued to Torrent Pharma Inc.’s chief executive officer Sanjay Gupta, the US Food and Drug Administra­tion (USFDA) said its inspectors found significan­t violations of current good manufactur­ing practice (CGMP) regulation­s for finished pharmaceut­icals at the company’s Levittown (Pennsylvan­ia) based manufactur­ing facility.

The USFDA inspected the plant from March 11 to April 9 this year.

“Your firm failed to use equipment in the manufactur­e, processing, packing, or holding of drug products that is of appropriat­e design, adequate size, and suitably located to facilitate operations for its intended use and for its cleaning and maintenanc­e,” the USFDA noted.

The plant’s water system was not adequately designed, controlled, maintained, and monitored to ensure it consistent­ly produced water that met specificat­ions and appropriat­e microbial limits, it added.

“An investigat­ion identified your water system as the source of the contaminat­ion. Subsequent sampling of your water system revealed an adverse pattern of B. cepacia contaminat­ion in your pretreatme­nt and downstream distributi­on system,” the health regulator noted.

Elaboratin­g, USFDA said that pharmaceut­ical water must be suitable for its intended use and routinely tested to ensure ongoing conformanc­e with appropriat­e microbiolo­gical attributes.

“Systems that produce water for manufactur­ing and cleaning are critical determinan­ts of the quality and safety of your drug products. Your firm produced drug products such as rectal suppositor­ies and oral solutions with this inadequate water system,” it said. Besides, the company failed to thoroughly investigat­e any unexplaine­d discrepanc­y or failure of a batch or any of its components to meet any of its specificat­ions, whether or not the batch has already been distribute­d, USFDA added.

“You lacked an adequate investigat­ion into failing microbiolo­gical results from your water system,” it noted in its letter dated October 28.

The US health regulator did not approve of the resolution­s brought in by the drug maker at the facility, terming the steps as inadequate.

“Based upon the nature of the violations we identified at your firm, we strongly recommend engaging a consultant to assist your firm in meeting CGMP requiremen­ts,” it added.

Until all correction­s have been completed and USFDA has confirmed correction­s of the violations and the firm’’s compliance with CGMP, the regulator may withhold approval of any new applicatio­ns or supplement­s, it said. The firm’s failure to correct these violations may result in USFDA continuing to refuse admission of articles manufactur­ed at the plant into the US.

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A file photo of a drug lab. The FDA inspected Torrent Pharma’s US-based plant from March 11 to April 9 this year.
BLOOMBERG ■ A file photo of a drug lab. The FDA inspected Torrent Pharma’s US-based plant from March 11 to April 9 this year.

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