ADVERTISEMENT

FDA Woes Hit Aurobindo Pharma As Unit 4 Gets Nine Observations

Majority of the U.S. FDA’s observations For Aurobindo Pharma’s Unit 4 are relating to equipment and cleanliness.

An employee holds pills at a pharmaceutical lab. (Photographer: Sara Hylton/Bloomberg)  
An employee holds pills at a pharmaceutical lab. (Photographer: Sara Hylton/Bloomberg)  

Aurobindo Pharma Ltd. received nine observations from the U.S. drug regulator for one of its Hyderabad units. That’s worrying for two reasons. One, it’s an injectables facility that’s required to maintain the highest standards; and two, several drug approvals from it are pending in the U.S., the company’s biggest market.

The observations for Unit 4 in Hyderabad relate to equipment and cleanliness, employees training, quality control and computer controls, according to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s Form 483 reviewed by BloombergQuint. Aurobindo Pharma will now have to respond with corrective measures to get the plant cleared.

FDA Woes Hit Aurobindo Pharma As Unit 4 Gets Nine Observations

These are not just procedural observations as the company reported earlier, but a strong criticism of its sterile manufacturing unit, especially regarding inadequately designed equipment, untrained staff and maintenance, said Amit Rajan, managing director of quality and regulatory consultant Prosfora Technologies. The company would require robust commitments from the management to move past these observations, he said. The remark on computerised system management are unfortunate given the number of inspections the company has faced from U.S. FDA, he said.

Unit 4 is one of the most important plants for Aurobindo Pharma, contributing 15 percent of the total U.S. sales. More importantly, the next leg of growth will come from this plant as it has several pending approvals. All high-margin injectable products are filed from the Hyderabad facility, the company said in its post-earnings conference call. It’s looking at sales of $180-185 million from the unit by the end of the ongoing financial year and increase to about $250 million by the year through March 2020.

Repeated attempts by BloombergQuint to reach the company over the phone and email remain unanswered.

Aurobindo Pharma will now have to respond to the U.S. FDA with corrective measures. If it doesn’t respond do that appropriately, then the plant can get a warning letter, Gurudatta GG, chief executive officer and director at consultant Estima Pharma Solutions, said. The regulator doesn’t approve filings from a plant that has received a warning letter.

While the observations do not point to any data integrity, the U.S. FDA would be more concerned as the issues relate to an injectables plant, which is expected to maintain the highest level of quality.

“The U.S. FDA will be stringent in terms of future course as observations relate to cleanliness in an injectables plant,” Amey Chalke, analyst at HDFC Securities said, stressing that a depends on on the company’s response. “Don’t see an immediate warning letter as the company will have time to respond. It may get a warning letter if the responses are not appropriate.”