CHICAGO (Reuters) - The company that
produced contaminated medications linked to an unprecedented fungal meningitis outbreak
faced mounting scrutiny on Saturday over whether it illegally sold drugs to
medical facilities, as the death toll from the disease grew to 15.
The Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) said another person died from meningitis, the second death in Indiana. The
number of cases of the disease reported reached 201 in 14 states, according to
the CDC and state officials.
Illinois reported its first case of
meningitis from a steroid injection and New Hampshire officials reported that
state's first four confirmed cases from the outbreak, which showed no signs of
abating.
Tennessee is the worst affected state with
six deaths and 52 cases followed by Michigan with three deaths and 41 cases,
including one case of an infection that has not been confirmed as
meningitis.
As federal and state authorities scrambled to contain the outbreak,
investigators were trying to determine how the medication produced by New
England Compounding Center was contaminated and whether its sprawling drug
supply business complied with licensing laws.
A series of emails between the company and a clinic in
Mississippi reviewed by Reuters show that NECC sold drugs without requiring
physicians to supply individual patient prescriptions. The customer confirmed
that NECC supplied the clinic with drugs without patient names or prescriptions,
which are required by a number of states including Massachusetts, where the company is
based.
The emails also indicate that NECC referred
business to a sister company, Ameridose LLC, despite a
statement by Ameridose earlier this week that the two operated separately.
NECC has recalled the suspect product, surrendered its license to operate in
Massachusetts and suspended operations. Ameridose also has temporarily suspended
operations."NECC's intent has always been to operate in compliance with our licenses in the states where we do business," the company said in a statement.
FEDERAL CRITICISM
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is investigating NECC and there have been calls from some in Congress for a criminal investigation of the company.
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