A three-member team has been sent by the State Food and Drug
Administration (SFDA) to investigate the medical injections
suspected of causing the deaths of up to four people.
Clindamycin phosphate glucose, used to treat bacterial
infections, has been reportedly linked to four deaths with
63-year-old Sun Xueying being the latest possible victim.
The SFDA team is now at Anhui Huayuan Worldbest Biology Pharmacy
Co, where the drug is produced, in east China's Anhui Province.
Liu Zilin, of the Anhui Provincial Food and Drug Administration,
was quoted by The Beijing News on Monday as saying the
investigation would last at least until the middle of August.
Liu noted that most patients, mainly from rural areas, who
suffered adverse reactions to the antibiotic, received injections
at local clinics before being sent to hospital for emergency
treatment.
More than 80 cases of severe adverse reactions to the drug,
including the four possible deaths, have been reported in 10
provinces, according to the Adverse Drug Reaction Monitoring Center
of the SFDA. The SFDA team is looking for any proof of a direct
link between the injections and the deaths
A Ministry of Health team has also been sent to No.2 Hospital
Affiliated to Harbin Medical University, in Heilongjiang, where a six-year-old girl died
after receiving the drug. More than 10 patients who suffered
adverse reactions to the injections are receiving treatment at the
hospital.
An increasing number of patients from Qinghai, Guangxi, Zhejiang, Heilongjiang and Shandong have complained about symptoms ranging
from chest and stomach pains, diarrhoea, nausea, vomiting and even
anaphylactic shock after being injected with the Anhui Huayuan
drug.
Sun Xueying, from Xianyang, the drug's fourth possible victim,
experienced a severe adverse reaction while receiving the injection
to treat rheumatism on July 30, according to the Chinese
Business View, a Shaanxi-based newspaper. She died two days
later due to multiple organ failure, including liver and kidney
failure. It was only when Sun's relatives read newspaper reports
about the drug on August 4 that they began to suspect she might
have died because of it.
The Ministry of Health issued an urgent circular last week
suspending use of the drug.
Of the 3.68 million bottles of clindamycin phosphate glucose it
has produced since June, the Anhui firm has sold 3.18 million units
to 26 provinces, regions and municipalities. Some 1.4 million units
have now been impounded.
Wang Xinchun, director of the emergency ward of the No.2
Hospital, said the drug was widely used in rural clinics because it
was cheap.
Li Jun, director of the Heilongjiang Provincial Food and Drug
Administration in Harbin, said the adverse reactions may also be a
result of incorrect storage or use of the drug.
(China Daily August 8, 2006)