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Dietary supplements: Manufacturing troubles widespread, FDA inspections show

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In his opinion, Cate wrote, the problem was caused by contractors incorrectly interpreting the formula, incorrectly formulating it, or both. The company is in the midst of settling lawsuits, he wrote.

“Not sure if FDA inspections of manufacturing facilities would have made any difference as this was a problem with formulation and not a problem with the manufacturing facilities themselves,” Cate wrote.

Fabricant called the Total Body Formula incidents “a classic case” of not adhering to good manufacturing practices. “This is why these things are important,” he said.

Unlike drug companies, dietary supplement firms are not required by law to prove to the FDA that their products work or are safe before they sell them. The FDA does regulate the claims that firms make about their products — for example, companies cannot say a supplement will cure a disease — and the agency can take action if it deems a product to be an imminent hazard or significant risk.

The FDA also can regulate the way supplements are made, and in 2008, the agency began enforcing its new rules through inspections of the largest of the industry’s nearly 1,400 supplement firms. Medium-sized and small firms were given a year or two longer to comply.

A flurry of warning letters soon followed, along with more serious consequences like legal action against companies and their owners.

In the case of the Paterson, N.J., supplement plant infested with rodents, the federal government filed a civil complaint against Quality Formulation Laboratories, related companies and their owner in 2009. The defendants agreed to stop manufacturing and distributing their products and to meet a series of conditions before starting up again.

Instead, according to the government, the defendants simply moved their production to another plant in Congers, N.Y., even providing transportation to the facility for employees. Last year, a jury found the defendants guilty of multiple counts of criminal contempt, fining the companies and sentencing the owners and managers to prison time. The convictions are being appealed.

Bradford Williams, manager of the FDA Division of Dietary Supplement Programs, expressed exasperation while addressing an audience at SupplySide West, a large dietary supplement conference in Las Vegas in October.

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