Dr. Steven Galson, a top official at the
Food and Drug Administration, told the Senate Health, Education, Labor and
Pensions Committee that in 2001 the agency had done a "limited"
survey of drugs from 12 such pharmacies, including hormones, antibiotics,
steroids and drugs to treat glaucoma, asthma and erectile dysfunction.
And he shed some light on the risks from an
industry now at the heart of today's unprecedented meningitis outbreak.
Ten of the 29 drugs failed one or more
quality tests, including nine that failed potency testing, some with less than
70 percent of their declared potency. By contrast, in its analyses of more than
3,000 samples from drug manufacturers, who are subject to FDA oversight, only
four had quality problems.
"They had ample warning of problems in
this industry," said Sarah Sellers, a pharmacist who worked in compounding
before joining the FDA in 2005 to work on compliance issues surrounding
compounding.
Now, as the deaths and illnesses mount from
fungal meningitis linked to a contaminated steroid injection, the question of
why early concerns about pharmacy compounding did not change U.S. law is a top
focus for patients, regulators and lawmakers.
The FDA has traced the steroid injections
to New England Compounding Center, or NECC, a Framingham, Massachusetts compounding
pharmacy founded in 1998.
Shortly after Galson testified in 2003,
Congress killed an attempt to establish an FDA oversight committee on pharmacy
compounding. It was the first in a series of failures to regulate this
little-known side of the pharmaceutical industry, which has fought back through
Capitol Hill lobbying and political donations.
Much of the lobbying comes from grassroots
mobilization of compounding pharmacists. Through programs such as
"Compounders on Capitol Hill," they fan out to their senators and
representatives to impress on politicians and their staffers the need for
compounding.
"They mobilize their members, they
scare patients and parents, and they flood Capitol Hill," said Sandra
Fusco Walker, director of patient advocacy at Allergy & Asthma Network
Mothers of Asthmatics. "They are dedicated to making sure they never have
FDA oversight."
Fusco Walker first tangled with the
industry in 2004, when drugs produced by a compounding pharmacy for use in
special inhalers called nebulizers turned out to have contamination and potency
problems. She and her allies succeeded in getting insurers not to reimburse for
compounded nebulizer drugs, essentially driving compounders out of that
business.
SMALL-TOWN POLITICS
The International Academy of Compounding
Pharmacists, the industry's Texas-based trade association, has long argued that
existing regulations are more than adequate to protect patients.
"Compounding pharmacies are regulated
by state boards of pharmacy and we also have an accrediting body," David
Miller, chief executive of IACP, told Reuters. Heavy-handed federal oversight
could strangle an industry that "serves a vital function," he said,
including providing drugs that major manufacturers have stopped producing.
Small-town politics proved key to defeating
the 2003 effort, which would have added a provision for the FDA advisory panel
in a bill on the government's Medicare health plan for the elderly.
The IACP, which represents more than 2,700
pharmacists and others involved in compounding, ranging from those working in
corner drugstores to owners of sizable operations including NECC, rallied its
members.
It targeted lawmakers central to the
decision-making process like Republican Representative Tom DeLay, whose Texas
district was home to the IACP's Missouri City headquarters. DeLay was also
House Majority leader from 2003 until 2005, when he resigned in the face of
money-laundering charges for which he was later convicted.
The next serious attempt at regulation came
in 2007, when Democratic Senator Edward Kennedy and Republican colleagues
introduced the Safe Drug Compounding Act. It would have given the FDA authority
to restrict when doctors could order injectable drugs from compounders, limit
interstate distribution of compounded drugs, and establish requirements for
sterile compounding.
The American Pharmacists Association, IACP
and seven related professional organizations warned Kennedy and colleagues who
were spearheading the bill that it would "negatively impact patient access
to necessary compounded prescription medications," according to a March
2007 letter reviewed by Reuters.
A spokesman for IACP, David Ball, said no
one from that era remains in any leadership positions at the group, but did not
respond to questions about the current leaders' positions on the Kennedy bill.
The IACP raised its lobbying spending to
$260,000 that year, from $20,000 in 2001 and $80,000 in 2005, according to the
Center for Responsive Politics, which tracks such spending. It spent $116,189
in 2011 and $55,131 so far this year, according to the Center.
Compounders also enlisted parents of
autistic children, who besieged Kennedy's office, arguing that compounding
pharmacies were the sole source of treatments for the condition, such as the
unproven therapy chelation to remove toxic metals from the body. Kennedy's bill
never reached the floor.
The bill's proponents "saw the
opposition and decided it wasn't going anywhere," said Fusco Walker.
'I'M SPECIAL' MEDICATION
For critics of the industry, it is no small
irony that Kennedy's bill would have required the FDA to track three
characteristics common to the tainted drugs linked to the current outbreak. The
pharmacy under investigation, NECC, provided injectable drugs, shipped them
across state lines and promised they met sterile conditions.
"There is a compounding pharmacy in
every congressional district in the country, and compounders were on the Hill
every year marching whenever there was a bill that would have increased federal
oversight of them," said pharmacist Sellers, now president of Q-Vigilance,
a consulting firm that advises pharmaceutical companies on safety.
Sellers resigned from the FDA in 2007,
frustrated that bills such as Kennedy's went nowhere. Absent federal oversight
of compounders, state boards of pharmacy, which typically have half a dozen
inspectors for thousands of pharmacies, oversee them.
The FDA has asked Congress for greater
regulatory authority, particularly after a 2002 Supreme Court decision stripped
it of much of what it had.
"FDA's legal authority to regulate
compounded drugs is complex and has been challenged vigorously by the
compounding industry both in courts and Congress," said FDA spokeswoman
Erica Jefferson.
The practice of compounding dates to the
earliest pharmacies. Under U.S. law, compounding pharmacies can assemble the
raw ingredients of any medication, whether or not it has been approved by the
FDA, but are supposed to do so one prescription at a time, not in
industrial-scale runs.
But as the Senate heard testimony in 2003
about thousands of patients injured or killed by bad batches of compounded
drugs, demand for the products was growing from patients seeking more
personalized therapies and from healthcare providers dealing with shortages of
important medications.
A former NECC employee told Reuters that
the lot numbers on the contaminated steroid indicated that the 17,000-plus
doses were made on three days, casting doubt on whether the company was
producing one prescription at a time for a named patient, as the IACP says
compounding pharmacies are supposed to.
"More and more people are saying ‘I'm
special,' and can't take off-the-shelf medications," said Bill Zolner,
chief scientific officer of Eagle Analytical Services, which performs quality
and safety testing for compounding pharmacies and last tested a sample from
NECC in 2008.
Some patients have allergies to a coloring
agent or other inactive ingredient in a drug produced by a pharmaceutical
company, for instance. Compounding pharmacies can make medications without the
allergen.
Other patients seek a more natural product.
For example, some women who receive hormone replacement therapy to treat
menopause symptoms do not want the standard Premarin, made from the urine of
pregnant mares, but instead search for biologically closer alternatives. A
compounding pharmacist can produce human progesterone, for instance, from a
plant compound, synthesizing a chemical identical to that in a woman's body.
"Progesterone is not available from
pharmaceutical companies because it's not patentable," said Zolner.
"So you get it from a compounding pharmacy."
Drug shortages have also boosted business
for compounding pharmacies. Zolner estimates that thousands of medicines still
in use have become harder to find after losing the patent protection that kept
them profitable, meaning that brand-name and even generic drugmakers have
turned to making other products.
"When even hospitals faced drug
shortages - including for life-sustaining drugs - they had to turn to
compounding pharmacies," said Joe Cabaleiro, executive director of the
Pharmacy Compounding Accreditation Board (PCAB), which was founded in January
2006 by IACP and other pharmacy groups in the wake of concerns about the safety
of drugs from compounding pharmacies.
The active ingredients for such drugs are
often available, and far smaller compounders can still do a decent business
producing the medications.
"If there is one reason why we see
more use of (compounding pharmacies) in a hospital setting, it's because of drug
shortages," including of cancer medications and anesthesia, said Leigh
Briscoe-Dwyer, the chief pharmacy and medication safety officer for North Shore
- LIJ Health System on New York's Long Island, adding that she and her staff do
extensive due diligence on a compounding pharmacy before ordering from one.
"If I can't get a product from my
normal channel but a drug compounder is able to compound that preparation for
me, it's a way that we can get medications without interrupting care," she
said.
BENIGN NEGLECT
Compounders have also enjoyed benign
neglect from global pharmaceutical makers, who lobbied against a 1997 law that
exempted drugs compounded by pharmacists from the usual safety and efficacy
requirements.
"After that we didn't hear from big
pharma again," said Sellers. "They haven't been very active on this
issue because they haven't seen compounders as enough of a threat."
The Pharmaceutical Research and
Manufacturers of America, the trade group for the pharmaceutical industry,
declined to comment on compounding pharmacies.
Historians estimate that about 80 percent
of prescriptions were compounded until the 1950s, when the post-World War II
boom in drug manufacturing led to the eventual domination of mass-produced
products by FDA-regulated manufacturers.
By 2006, some 30 million prescriptions were
written for compounded products, or as many as 5 percent of annual
prescriptions, found an analysis by a researcher at Kaiser Permanente. An
estimated 3,000 to 5,000 compounding pharmacies operate in the United States,
said Cabaleiro.
The problems have not been far behind. From
2001 to 2007, 120 patients in 11 states contracted bacterial and viral
infections, including hepatitis C and meningitis, from drugs produced by
compounding pharmacies; four died.
The death toll spiked in 2011, when nine
patients died from bloodstream infections they developed after receiving
intravenous medications prepared by a compounding pharmacy.
Even top hospitals were affected. When scientists
at Johns Hopkins University investigated bacterial infections in six intensive
care unit patients, they traced it to contaminated fentanyl, the powerful
painkiller, from a compounding pharmacy.
"We assume any drug bought in large
quantities by a healthcare facility comes from an FDA-approved and licensed
manufacturer," said epidemiologist Lisa Maragakis, assistant professor of
medicine at Hopkins, who led a 2009 study of the fentanyl case.
When she shared her finding with hospital
pharmacists, they said they could not stop ordering from compounders: they were
the only source of the fentanyl doses the ICU needed.
Such outbreaks led to the formation of the
accreditation board in 2006. If a compounding pharmacy requests accreditation,
PCAB will conduct an on-site inspection to assess, among other things, workers'
competence, equipment, record keeping, air quality and clean-room qualities,
said Cabaleiro.
Of the thousands of compounding pharmacies,
162 had been accredited; NECC is not among them.
"We've tried very hard to get the word
out" to doctors and hospitals, among others, about the importance of using
an accredited pharmacy, Cabaleiro said. "But it seems the market hasn't
demanded accreditation."
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