Ben Venue Laboratories Enters Consent Decree - Pharmaceutical Technology

Latest Issue
PharmTech

Latest Issue
PharmTech Europe

Ben Venue Laboratories Enters Consent Decree


ePT--the Electronic Newsletter of Pharmaceutical Technology

Ben Venue Laboratories announced that it has voluntarily entered into a consent decree with FDA over violations of cGMP. Under the terms of the consent decree, Ben Venue is still permitted to manufacture and distribute more than 100 drugs that are essential for patient care. Ben Venue is also permitted to continue drug-development activities, and may file abbreviated new drug applications (ANDAs), and, as remediation progresses to FDA’s satisfaction, receive ANDA approvals and manufacture other products.

In November 2011, Ben Venue voluntarily suspended manufacturing at its Bedford, Ohio facility because of significant manufacturing and quality concerns. The Bedford site manufactured sterile injectable products, including the cancer drug Doxil, which was in critically short supply as a result of the suspension.

According to Ben Venue’s press release, the company has invested more than $300 million to upgrade its facilities, making necessary improvements and changes to processes to address the manufacturing-related issues that resulted in the company’s decision to halt manufacturing. Ben Venue has demonstrated progress in improving manufacturing processes and announced in October 2012 that limited production had resumed. Since that time, production has resumed on additional manufacturing lines.

ADVERTISEMENT

blog comments powered by Disqus
LCGC E-mail Newsletters

Subscribe: Click to learn more about the newsletter
| Weekly
| Monthly
|Monthly
| Weekly

Survey
What is the single greatest threat to maintaining manufacturing processes at your facility?
Quality issues
Facility/environment problems
Process development problems
Production equipment downtime
Raw material supply problems
Regulatory restrictions
Business decisions to limit production
Quality issues
42%
Facility/environment problems
0%
Process development problems
8%
Production equipment downtime
8%
Raw material supply problems
25%
Regulatory restrictions
0%
Business decisions to limit production
17%
View Results
UPCOMING CONFERENCES

Programs for Investigational and Pre-Launch Drugs
Philadelphia, PA
July 17-18, 2013
Request Brochure

Strategic Pipeline Planning & Portfolio Valuation
Philadelphia, PA
August 13-14, 2013
Request Brochure

MES 2013 - Forum on Manufacturing Execution Systems
Philadelphia, PA
August 14-15, 2013
Request Brochure

Mobile Innovation for the Life Sciences Industry
Philadelphia, PA
August 20-21, 2013
Request Brochure

See All Conferences >>

Eric Langer Outsourcing Outlook Eric LangerOutsourcing's Modest Role as a Cost-Containment Strategy
Patricia Van Arnum Ingredients Insider Patricia Van ArnumIntellectual Property Battles in Solid-State Chemistry
Nathan Jessop Industry Insider Nathan Jessop Campaign Against Counterfeit Drugs Continues
Lynn Torbeck Statistical Solutions Lynn D. TorbeckCompositing Samples and the Risk to Product Quality
 More
Patent Settlements Become More Risky
Praise and Perils for Biotechnology Patent Policy
Risk-Mitigation Strategies in Drug Manufacturing for Emerging Markets
Quality Focus: Ensuring Raw Material Transparency
Advertising of Prescription Drugs  Keeping it Honest and Balanced
Source: ePT--the Electronic Newsletter of Pharmaceutical Technology,
Click here