Friday, June 1, 2007

FDA Flexes Muscles Against Shelhigh

Filed under: Regulation

bioconduitcircle.jpgWe've heard of the FDA revoking approval, or issuing recalls. But we didn't know they could seize products and block shipments -- perhaps because it's rare that a company lets things get that far.

Shelhigh is one such company. Makers of a heart valve fixative process for cardiothoracic surgery, they've been manufacturing with substandard practices for years, causing accelerated aging in their contaminated surgical implants, FDA alleges. After countless warnings, the FDA got tough:

A seizure is an enforcement action taken as a last resort to remove a dangerous product from commerce. The FDA initiates the action by filing a complaint with the District Court where the product is located, and a US marshal is then directed by the court to take possession of the goods until the matter is resolved. The complaint against Shelhigh was filed on April 16, 2007.

The US Marshal did not physically remove the devices from the plant but rather "seized them in place," meaning Shelhigh cannot remove, attempt to remove or in any way interfere with the products without the prior written permission from the US Marshal. The firm's products have also been embargoed by the state of New Jersey.

In fact, the story here is not that the FDA can recruit US Marshals and can function like the DEA when it needs to -- the real story is that they waited five years between their first warning and their second, and sent a half-dozen increasingly shrill warnings over 18 months before finally acting in May:
It's difficult to understand how Shelhigh believes it has a legal leg to stand on in light of the FDA's last 7 years of warnings, threats and promises. Investigators documented deficiencies in the firm's Union City facility in 2000 and 2005, and those inspections resulted in warning letters to Shelhigh in April 2000 and December 2005.

A December 14, 2005 warning letter spelled out what Shelhigh was facing. "Your failure to comply with any post-approval-requirement, the FDA explained, constitutes a ground for withdrawal of the Human Device Exemption and commercial distribution of a device that is not in compliance with these conditions is a violation of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act."

...As for its part, according to Mr Gaudio, the FDA would not comment on why it waited 5 years between warning letters and then nearly a year-and-a-half between the December 2005 letter and the seizure, or why it then waited 2 more weeks after the seizure to send Shelhigh a formal request for a product recall.

More from the FDA...

Shelhigh's perspective...

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replies: 2 comments
Open comments are not moderated, although abusive and vulgar remarks may be deleted. Opinions expressed do not necessarily reflect the views of Medgadget.com. Please consult our disclaimer.

Please note that the FDA is ALLEGING certain cGMP issues; no such determination of these allegations has been made. The claim in the article that, Shelhigh has "been manufacturing with substandard practices for years, causing accelerated aging in their contaminated surgical implants," is a pure fabrication and distortion of the truth, even as stated by the FDA.


Posted by: Shelhigh, Inc.
on June 1, 2007 10:38 AM GMT

I guess you reap what you sow.
I am amazed that this action took so long to come by. This is what you get by hiring illegal aliens with no verifiable background of any type of medical device manufacturing history. Totally unmotivated lot. All the workers care about is getting their (close to or less than) minimum wage and hoping that the founders wife, who also acts as the General Manger, will be able to add correctly and pay them for their worked time in full.
Not to mention the handful of staff whose professional opinions and experience counts for nought. The high employee turnover and abysmally low employee morale at Shelhigh should be a pointer to the nature of things at Shelhigh, and an environment in which suspicions of the "family secret recipe" being revealed, is the management tenet that the company is run by.


Posted by: Ex-Shelhigh Employee
on August 27, 2007 02:16 AM GMT

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