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A technical review of the events leading to the global recall of Viracept film coated tablets 250 mg in June 2007 is given from the drug substance manufacturing perspective. Root cause analysis performed and corrective actions implemented are presented. Using the decay rate of ethyl methane sulfonate in Viracept film coated tablets 250 mg at 25 degrees C derived from stability studies, establishing of the worst case scenario for patient exposure to ethyl methane sulfonate, is outlined. Whereas the first evaluation based on ethyl methane sulfonate levels found in the drug substance suggested a worst case patient exposure of 2300 ppm, the decay rate of ethyl methane sulfonate in the drug product and the time gap between drug product manufacture and earliest possible use by patients led to the conclusion that 920 ppm (+/-10%) over a period of approx. 90 days is a reasonably cautious assumption for the worst case patient exposure scenario.

Citation

Christoph Gerber, Heinz-Gerhard Toelle. What happened: the chemistry side of the incident with EMS contamination in Viracept tablets. Toxicology letters. 2009 Nov 12;190(3):248-53

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PMID: 19857795

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