Archive for the 'Products' Category
Published by Alexis Pellek on May 27, 2010
under Manufacturing, North America News, Products, Regulation
The House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform will hold a hearing this morning at 10 am to investigate the recent recall of more than 40 of McNeil Healthcare’s infants’ and children’s medications. See the link on the committee’s website to connect to the live webcast. Read more »
Published by Alexis Pellek on May 20, 2010
under Ingredients, Manufacturing, North America News, Products
The Wall Street Journal reported yesterday that some of McNeil Consumer Healthcare’s recalled infants’ Tylenol contained as much as 24% more acetaminophen than it should have, according to a letter the company sent to physicians and poison-control personnel. McNeil’s letter stated that the samples containing the 24% increase did not reach the public, but that the company could not be sure “all the individual bottles were within specification or that 24% would have been the maximum,” according to WSJ. Read more »
Published by Erik Greb on December 7, 2009
under Biotech, Manufacturing, North America News, Products, Regulation
Last week, Genzyme’s (Cambridge, MA) Allston Landing, Massachusetts, plant resumed production of Cerezyme, the company’s treatment for Gaucher’s disease. Genzyme presumably found and eliminated the source of contamination that had been reported weeks earlier. You’d think that after putting out this latest fire at the troubled plant, the company would be justified in heaving a sigh of relief. Read more »
Published by Corrine Lawrence, PharmTech Europe on November 19, 2009
under Europe News, Products, Regulation
Technology is not the answer, at least not for tackling pharmaceutical counterfeiting. Instead, increasing criminal sanctions and encouraging relevant parties to work with “certified and reliable partners” are the real solutions. Read more »
Published by Alexis Pellek on November 6, 2009
under Africa News, Asia News, Europe News, Latin & South America News, North America News, Products
The US Agency for International Development (USAID) and the US Pharmacopeial Convention (USP) recently announced a new program designed to fight the growing problem of substandard and counterfeit drugs in developing countries. Read more »
Published by Fedra Pavlou, PharmTech Europe on November 4, 2009
under Europe News, Products, Regulation
In a news release issued by the European Organisation for Rare Diseases (EURORDIS) this week, the society commended the European Medicines Agency (EMEA) in its efforts to make the information that it has available on medicines more patient-friendly. Read more »
Published by Alexis Pellek on October 23, 2009
under Packaging & Labeling, Products
This week, the European Federation of Pharmaceutical Industries and
Associations (EFPIA) launched a two-month pilot project in Sweden designed to test a serialization and verification system in pharmacies that would fight counterfeit drugs. Read more »
Published by Alexis Pellek on October 2, 2009
under Products, Trends
Pharmaceutical brands face an increased threat online, according to a new report by the brand-protection firm MarkMonitor. The study, Brandjacking Index: Summer 2009, focused on six leading drug brands and examined these key areas of pharmaceutical brand abuse online: illicit pharmacies, listings on B2B exchange sites, and cybersquatting, or the abuse of a trademark within a domain name. Read more »
Published by Michelle Hoffman on October 1, 2009
under Biotech, Manufacturing, North America News, Products
Fall is upon us and so is the awards season. And I’m not talking about the Emmy’s (although kudos to Mad Men). Earlier this month the Lasker Foundation gave out its Basic Medical Research Award, its Lasker-deBakey Clinical Medical Research Award, and the Mary Woodard Lasker Award for Public Service (see the Lasker Foundation website for more information). Next week the Nobel Committee will announce its award winners.
But last night belonged to the Pharmaceutical Industry. Read more »
Published by Alexis Pellek on September 24, 2009
under Biotech, Manufacturing, North America News, Products, R&D, Trends
Following up on last week’s post, it appears that the H1N1 flu vaccine is effective in older children, ages 10 to 17, based on preliminary results of an ongoing trial. This week, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health, announced that early results of clinical studies of the vaccine “look promising.” Read more »
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