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FDA Curbs Drug Exports from India's Wockhardt

Nov. 27, 2013
The FDA slapped an "import alert" on the company's Chikalthana plant in Maharashtra state, the regulator said in a notice on its website late Tuesday.

MUMBAI, India - The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has restricted exports from a plant owned by Indian generic drugmaker Wockhardt in the latest ban on its products.

The FDA slapped an "import alert" on the company's Chikalthana plant in Maharashtra state, the regulator said in a notice on its website late Tuesday.

An "import alert" means "detention without physical examination of drugs" from companies that have failed to meet so-called "good manufacturing practices" for drugs, the FDA said.

The same factory has already been targeted by Britain's health regulator, which last month recalled five drugs made by the firm at the plant.

Wockhardt has faced a string of export restrictions this year at some of its other factories in India. They were imposed by British and U.S. watchdogs, citing manufacturing concerns.

There was no immediate comment from the company.

India's government has defended its lucrative generic drug industry, which accounts for nearly $15 billion in annual exports, as safe and tightly regulated.

India's pharma giant Ranbaxy, after facing a lengthy legal battle in the United States, was hit by a new setback in September.

The U.S. FDA that month banned imports from Ranbaxy's "ultra modern" Mohali plant in northern India, whose renovation was supposed to mark a turning point for the Indian generics giant after years of run-ins with U.S. regulators.

Now three of Ranbaxy's plants have been hit by a ban on exports to the United States, its largest market.

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2013

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