British pharmaceutical company Medeva's Liverpool plant was found by the
U.S. Food and Drug Administration to be producing vaccines in filthy
conditions. The FDA report found that Medeva neither maintained nor
cleaned its equipment. It also reported that Medeva was unable to prove
that its vaccines were not contaminated with bacteria or fungi. Because it
exports flu vaccine to America, Medeva got a U.S. Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) “warning” to clean up its act. However, in a report
dated October 22, 2000, The Observer noted that the FDA had not
re-inspected the filthy Medeva factory since it sent the warning letter
earlier this year and has given the company the green light to sell an
estimated 20,000,000 doses of its “Fluvarin” flu vaccine in the U.S.
during this cold and flu season. FDA approval of the potentially
contaminated Fluvarin for sale in the U.S. was likely influenced by a
shortage of flu vaccine here this season. According to Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC) National Immunization Program Director Dr.
William Atkinson, the A-Moscow-1099 strain of flu virus did not incubate
properly this year and, therefore, did not produce "serum" in large enough
quantities to produce sufficient doses of flu vaccine to meet demand. So,
despite Medeva's history of contamination and production blunders, FDA has
authorized the distribution of Fluvarin to clinics and hospitals all over
the nation. According to The Observer, the FDA claims that the vaccine is
safe. The FDA also, at one time, claimed that silicone breast implants and
Phen-Phen were "safe" -- and those are just two of many FDA-approved
products that have ultimately been linked to serious health side-effects
that include chronic degenerative disease and death. Fluvarin is currently
on the shelves of doctors' offices and health departments all over the
country and is being administered to the public. Medical personnel in the
northwest U.S. who confirm that they have administered Fluvarin are
unaware of the Medeva scandal or the likelihood that the triple-antigen
flu vaccine is contaminated.

http://www.centredaily.com/mld/centredaily/news/10122791.htm
Posted on Sun, Nov. 07, 2004
FDA knew problems at vaccine plant were pervasive, documents show
By MIKE MCGRAW
Kansas City Star
KANSAS CITY, Mo. - American regulators knew five years ago that contamination
at the now-infamous vaccine plant in Liverpool, England, was both pervasive
and persistent, documents show. In fact, evidence was so overwhelming that
regulators should have shut down the plant or sought alternative flu vaccine
sources long ago, say some vaccine and pharmaceutical experts who have
reviewed the documents.
Instead, the United States has lost 48 million doses of flu vaccine - half
its supply - after British regulators found more contamination and suspended
the plant's license last month. Documents obtained by The Kansas City Star
show the Food and Drug Administration five years ago noted that the plant,
then owned by the British firm Medeva, had failed to correct longstanding
problems. But the agency continued to allow the plant to supply the U.S.
market despite clear departures from what the agency calls "Good
Manufacturing Practices."
Indeed, Medeva plant managers failed to identify the source of serious and
potentially deadly contamination in partially processed vaccines. They
attempted to get around the problem by taking such steps as mixing samples of
highly contaminated vaccines with cleaner lots in order to reduce
bacteria levels. FDA officials say later inspections show the plant made
improvements, but four experts who reviewed the documents at the newspaper's
request questioned why the FDA did not take stronger action in 1999.
"The license should have been pulled in `99 regardless of vaccine access
issues," said Sarah Sellers, a pharmacist, former FDA adviser and consultant
on pharmaceutical policy and regulation.
"The problem was not new then, and it is not new today."
The findings in the 1999 FDA inspection report angered one congressman who is
helping to lead an investigation into this year's vaccine shortage. "To have
years of warnings like this and do nothing is government malpractice," said
Rep. Henry Waxman, a California Democrat and ranking minority member of the
House Committee on Government Reform. "It is clear from this report that it
is no unexpected accident that we have a flu vaccine shortage. The problems
at the plant were systemic and known years earlier."
Although the 1999 report showed widespread contamination in the manufacturing
process, including unfinished vaccines, tests indicated that later
sterilization made the completed vaccine usable. In fact, Lester M. Crawford,
acting FDA commissioner, said Friday in a written response that this year was
the first time inspectors found contamination in the finished vaccine.
Although the 1999 inspection found a problem in the final vaccine, it was a
sterility failure confined to one lot manufactured the previous year, he
said. "The most significant issues identified in 1999 were the lack of
validation for its manufacturing processes, including establishing proper
limits for bioburden (including bacteria) and issues related to assuring
sterility in the manufacturing process," Crawford said.
Inspections in 2001 and 2003, which the FDA has not yet released, found that
the plant had made improvements, he said. Crawford did not respond to
suggestions by The Kansas City Star's experts
that the FDA should have taken stronger action after the 1999 inspection. He
also did not say whether the earlier contamination problems were solved. His
statement did say that the FDA required additional corrective actions in 2001
and 2003.
Officials of a Belgian firm that now owns Medeva did not return calls
requesting comment. At the time, however, Medeva officials agreed to correct
many problems the FDA identified. In some cases, they objected to the FDA's
findings. Sellers and others said that, based on their experience, they think
it is likely that the 1999 and 2004 contamination problems are related. But
they cannot be sure. The source of this year's contamination is not known.
British and U.S. officials have yet to release further details or more recent
inspection documents.
Waxman, however, said one thing was clear.
"The tragic reality is that tens of thousands of vulnerable seniors will not
be protected from the flu this season," he said. "If the government had taken
strong action, the current crisis could have been avoided." The plant, which
is more than 25 years old, has had a history of problems under a succession
of owners. Just a few months after the FDA's 1999 inspection, polio vaccines
made at the plant were recalled because of concerns they were contaminated
with mad cow disease.
In 2001, hepatitis A vaccines being filled into syringes at the plant were
also ruined by contamination problems. The next year, routine testing of
tuberculosis vaccine made there showed low potency levels. During those
years, Medeva merged into Celltech Pharmaceuticals Ltd., another British
firm. In 2000, the plant was sold to PowderJect Ltd., another U.K.
pharmaceutical company. Chiron Corp., a U.S. biotech firm, purchased
PowderJect in mid-2003.
The plant has changed hands so many times that the name of one former owner
can still be seen under the light green paint on the brick-and-metal
building. Most owners said they had invested in plant improvements.
Throughout all the changes, the vaccine, Fluvirin, has remained the same.
About the time of the Chiron purchase, the FDA returned and again found
contamination in the flu vaccine process, but no significant problem with the
vaccine itself. The FDA relied on Chiron to fix the problems, but the company
reported in August that some vaccine was contaminated. FDA inspectors
returned in October after British regulators suspended the plant's license
for three months, citing contamination in the flu-vaccine-making process.
Crawford said the FDA in each inspection in recent years had reviewed the
company's plans to respond to its findings. "If fully implemented, the
company's plans appeared adequate to correct deficiencies," he said. In a
class-action lawsuit filed last month, Chiron stockholders allege that the
company knew the plant had serious contamination problems since at least 2000
and failed to address them or warn its stockholders. "Rather than coming
clean about the serious deficiencies at the Liverpool plant," the lawsuit
said, "defendants concealed these problems for as long as they could."
A Chiron representative said: "We are taking a prospective rather than
retrospective view right now with our public communications. Right now the
company is focused on our remediation plan and working with (U.S. and British
authorities) to get back on track for the 2005-2006 season."
The Kansas City Star obtained a copy of the FDA's 1999 inspection of the
plant last week. The report was part of a lawsuit filed on behalf of a woman
who allegedly became paralyzed as a result of a 1998 flu shot manufactured at
the Liverpool plant. Chiron settled the case earlier this year, but the
details are sealed, said the attorney in the case. The report shows that FDA
officials visited the plant for over a week during a biennial inspection in
1999 and found 17 problem areas. For example, the plant:
Mixed samples of highly contaminated vaccines with cleaner ones in an effort
to improve test results.
Failed for several years to verify to the FDA's satisfaction that its
production process met rigorous standards.
Raised its limits for allowable contaminants, such as bacteria and toxins.
Failed to control air flow and other possible contamination sources.
Could not produce critical documents about problems in the manufacturing
process. Inspectors also said the plant, unlike newer facilities, lacked
alarms that would alert workers to bacteria entering through the heating and
cooling system. They noted that at least 21 batches of the vaccine
distributed during the 1999-2000 flu season had to be filtered more than once
to make them sterile.
Before the vaccine went through its final filtering, testing found such
bacteria as E. coli, which produces a powerful toxin and can cause severe
illness, and Chryseomonas luteloa, which can cause meningitis. Testing showed
that at some points in the process, the vaccine had bacterial counts hundreds
of thousands of times higher than plant tolerances.
Although testing in 1999 did not identify all of the specific bacteria found,
there was no mention that tests detected Serratia, the bacteria that entered
this year's batch of flu vaccine during the final step of the manufacturing
process. The report noted that FDA inspectors had found additional problems
in 1997, and that Medeva officials were in the midst of their ongoing
investigation into increased contamination inside the plant. The FDA
inspection quoted from a draft of a management report that said monitoring
had begun to show an increase in contamination since about 1998.
"To date the evidence suggests that the source of the microorganisms lies
within the process equipment or materials rather than chance contamination
from the environment or operations," the Medeva report said.
The FDA issued a warning letter to Medeva the following October, citing
"significant deviations from the acceptable standards and requirements of the
Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act." Problems included failure to maintain and
sanitize equipment "to prevent malfunction or contamination." License
suspension was one possible result, the agency said. The warning letter was
one of three the FDA issued among 20 vaccine manufacturers it inspected that
year.
The company responded on Nov. 15, accepting some of the findings and arguing
in other cases that the FDA had misinterpreted some of the information its
inspectors gathered. Company officials noted they were still looking into
increased microbial levels but there were no "conclusive findings."
The FDA responded in March 2000, saying it would verify the company's
corrective actions during the next inspection in 2001. In the meantime, the
director of the FDA's case management division wrote, "The FDA continues to
have concerns." Specifically, she said, the company's allowable tolerance of
contaminants was unacceptable. After reviewing the inspection report, several
experts said the problems were significant. The experts comprised a physician
who specializes in virology, two pharmaceutical experts and a former industry
executive who now does consulting work.
"If I were the FDA, I would have said, `Let's go get a contract with a new
plant,' " said Ashim Mitra, chairman of pharmaceutical sciences at the
University of Missouri-Kansas City. The process of mixing cleaner vaccines
with more contaminated samples alone "is a reprehensible practice," Mitra
said. While the finished vaccines were most likely safe, Mitra said, the
continuing contamination problems rendered the plant "a time bomb" in which
contamination could eventually reach the final product.
"Oh, dear," said William Schaffner, a Vanderbilt University infectious
disease expert, when told of the mixing operations and other practices. "If
you are a plant manager, that is one way of meeting a standard, technically,
but you are evading the intent." Schaffner said he was not an expert on flu
vaccine manufacturing, but as a doctor, "I would not expect a physician or
someone interested in vaccines to use a vaccine where a manufacturer gets
this kind of report card." Sellers said the state of affairs inspectors found
at the plant was frightening. She said she was surprised the FDA's
warning letter did not determine the company's vaccines were "adulterated"
based on a strict interpretation of federal food and drug laws. Such a
finding would require the FDA to pull products from the market.
The fact that the plant's manufacturing process had not been validated
(certified by the company as effective) since the early 1990s was a
"stunning" finding by the FDA inspection team, said Sellers, showing possible
lapses in earlier FDA inspections.
Sellers thinks that the FDA needs more resources for overseas inspections,
and that it missed an opportunity to avoid today's health crisis. "If the
license was pulled and the problems dealt with in `99, we may not be facing a
national public health crisis," Sellers said. The British license suspension
this year should not have surprised U.S. officials, one expert said. "It
should have come as no surprise that there was a potential for this episode,"
said David Webster, a former Aventis executive and now a biotech consultant.
"You have all sorts of evidence, including these documents from 1999, the
earlier recalls and manufacturing problems. It's not like this plant had
batted a thousand for 10 years and then got into a slump for a month." In
fact, Schaffner, a physician and chairman of the Department of Preventative
Medicine at Vanderbilt, said he was surprised no one at the FDA seemed to go
into attack mode when the most recent contamination problems became evident
two months ago - especially given what they now appear to have known five
years ago.
"Nobody at the FDA said `Holy Toledo, we've had bad contamination problems
there in the past and these new problems imperil half the supply of flu
vaccine in the U.S.,'" he said. "The FDA seemed to handle this in its
routine, bureaucratic fashion.
"The light never went on; they dropped the ball."
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