K-V prompts FDA investigation into compounding pharmacies

By Nick Taylor

- Last updated on GMT

Related tags Fda said.the fda Pharmacology Us food and drug administration

The FDA is investigating compounding pharmacies’ Makena after K-V Pharmaceutical said they differ from approved forms.

K-V won US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval for Makena in February but controversially charged $1,500 (€1,000) a shot. A formulation of hydroxyprogesterone, the active pharmaceutical ingredient (API), is sold by compounding pharmacies for $15 a shot, but K-V has questioned its purity.

According to the analysis of this information provided by K-V, there is variability in the purity and potency of both the bulk APIs and compounded hydroxyprogesterone caproate products that were tested​”, the FDA said.

The FDA has “carefully reviewed the data​” but is yet to validate the K-V analyses. To generate its own evidence the FDA is sampling and analysing compounded hydroxyprogesterone caproate products and bulk APIs.

While the FDA’s response fell short of validating the K-V data it did remind physicians of the different regulatory pathways faced by approved and compound products. Before a product, such as Makena, is approved the API source, manufacturing process and quality checks are all assessed.

Therefore, as with other approved drugs,​ greater assurance of safety and effectiveness is generally provided by the approved product than by a compounded product​”, the FDA said.

Shares in K-V closed up 91 per cent after the FDA released its statement.

The analysis

K-V said API used by compounding pharmacies comes primarily from plants in China that are neither registered nor inspected by the FDA. Also, K-V said some of the companies claiming to be original manufacturers are actually re-sellers, re-packagers, brokers or distributors of APIs produced in China.

An independent laboratory, commissioned by K-V, found seven of 10 API samples originated in China. The other three came from US-based resellers of, what K-V believes to be, Chinese produced APIs. In many cases paperwork needed to trace an API back to the source was lacking.

K-V claims eighty per cent of the samples failed to meet at least one FDA standard for unknown impurities and half were incompliant with US Pharmacopeia requirements for potency.

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