Free Newsletter
| Get the pharma industry's daily monitor, with a special focus on pharmaceutical company news and the market development of FDA approved products. Sign up for free today! |
Blaming Baxter, China denies heparin guilt
Point fingers at us, we'll point back at you. That's what China appears to be saying about the heparin scandal, claiming that it wasn't the "heparin-like substance" found in batches of the blood thinner that caused hundreds of severe reactions and up to 81 deaths.
Chinese officials are also blaming Baxter, which recalled millions of doses and stopped heparin production; they say the drugmaker won't cooperate with their investigation. The company destroyed some drug samples and production records that China considered important to their probe, one official said. A company spokeswoman denied the allegation, saying Baxter has cooperated "with all parties."
Admittedly, the FDA says it can't prove that the oversulfated chondroitin found in the offending batches actually caused the reactions. But China can't prove its theory that the culprit was actually introduced in the U.S., rather than overseas. Nor will China say where the heparin-like substance came from or how it got into the blood thinner. Until proof is on the table, the blame game will likely continue.
- check out the story in the International Herald Tribune
- see the Pharmalot item
ALSO: Analysts are bullish on Baxter's prospects despite the heparin recall and attending fallout. Report
Related Articles:
U.S., China trade blame on heparin
FDA chief suspects heparin 'fraud'
Heparin supply chain full of loopholes
Heparin mimic found in suspect samples
Origin labeling a sticky pharma problem
Comments
Both sides should pursuit the cause further. It is not a big deal to share some samples, and the research result will benefit all people.
Post new comment
Paid Research Reports
- RNA therapy: the next big thing after monoclonal antibodies?
- Biotech M&A Strategies: Deal assessments, trends and future prospects
- The Dermatology Market Outlook to 2013: Competitive landscape, pipeline analysis and growth opportunities
- Pipeline Insight: Cancer Overview - Breast, Gynecological, Genitourinary - Diverse drugs approaching the market for many tumor t
- Sales Force Effectiveness


