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DATA COMPILATION #PharmaFlow

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FDA’s December 2025 OPOE list features 784 prescription drugs, 73 OTC drugs
This week, PharmaCompass brings you key highlights of the US Food and Drug Administration’s December 2025 list of Off-Patent, Off-Exclusivity Drugs (OPOE) without an approved generic. The OPOE list gets updated every six months.This list highlights drug products that have lost patent protection and regulatory exclusivity, but remain without approved generic competition in the US market. With this list, the FDA hopes to bolster competitiveness in the generics market, improve transparency and encourage the development and submission of abbreviated new drug applications (ANDAs) in markets with little competition.Since December 2021, FDA has been publishing two versions of the OPOE list — one for prescription (Rx) drug products and the other for over-the-counter (OTC) drug products that are approved and marketed under a new drug approval (NDA).  Access the Interactive Dashboard on FDA's December 2025 List of OPOE Drugs (Free Excel)Injectables continue to dominate FDA’s OPOE Rx list; 73 OTC drugs figure in Dec listFDA’s December 2025 OPOE Rx list includes 784 drug products that currently have no approved generics. Out of these, 296 are injectables and 126 are oral solid dosage forms (such as tablets, capsules and modified release forms). In June 2025, the OPOE Rx list had 765 drug products without an approved generic, out of which 304 were injectables, while 109 were oral solid drug forms. The increase in drug products from 765 to 784 from June 2025 to December 2025 was due to the inclusion of additional dosage strengths in the OPOE Rx list. Otherwise, no new drugs were added to the December 2025 OPOE Rx list.The December 2025 OPOE list has 73 OTC drugs, slightly higher than the 69 drugs in the June 2025 list. Among the 73, 21 are oral solid dosage forms.Among the OTC drugs on the December 2025 OPOE list are ibuprofen and ibuprofen sodium (for pain and inflammation), pseudoephedrine hydrochloride and phenylephrine hydrochloride (nasal decongestants), nizatidine and famotidine (for gastroesophageal reflux disease), loratadine, cetirizine hydrochloride and chlorpheniramine maleate (for allergy relief), loperamide hydrochloride (anti-diarrheal), and orlistat (for weight management). Access the Interactive Dashboard on FDA's December 2025 List of OPOE Drugs (Free Excel)FDA fast-tracks initiatives to accelerate market entry of generics, biosimilarsFDA has launched several regulatory initiatives designed to accelerate the market entry of generics and biosimilars. In October 2025, the agency announced a new pilot prioritization program for the review of ANDAs that aims to encourage and reward investment in drug manufacturing, research and development and strengthen the pharmaceutical supply chain in the United States.Separately, FDA has also come out with a new draft guidance that seeks to simplify biosimilarity studies and reduce unnecessary clinical testing. Through a separate initiative, the agency also plans to make it easier for biosimilars to be developed as interchangeable with brand-name biologics, thereby helping patients and pharmacists choose lower-cost options. Access the Interactive Dashboard on FDA's December 2025 List of OPOE Drugs (Free Excel) Our viewThe global generic drugs market was valued at US$ 445.62 billion in 2024 and is projected to reach US$ 728.64 billion by 2034, growing at a compound annual growth rate of 5.04 percent from 2025 to 2034. With several diabetes, immunology, oncology and cardiology drugs slated to face patent expirations this year, and continued pressure on drugmakers to improve affordability, we believe the generic market could grow at an even faster rate in the near term.

Impressions: 3335

https://www.pharmacompass.com/radio-compass-blog/fda-s-december-2025-opoe-list-features-784-prescription-drugs-73-otc-drugs

#PharmaFlow by PHARMACOMPASS
22 Jan 2026

WEEKLY NEWS RECAP #Phispers

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FDA highlights data-integrity concerns at Pfizer’s India unit; FDA requests removal of all ranitidine products
This week, N-nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA) is back in news as the FDA requests manufacturers to withdraw ranitidine from the market immediately due to the presence of the cancer-causing impurity. Bristol Myers bagged FDA approval for its multiple sclerosis treatment Zeposia. However, its launch would be delayed due to the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic. In an unusual turn of events, Chinese officials have suspended the import of Bristol Myers’ cancer drug Abraxane, post inspection of the company’s facility in the US. Meanwhile, the FDA found data integrity concerns at Pfizer’s site in Visakhapatnam (India) and issued it a warning letter. The merger of Mylan with Upjohn (Pfizer’s off-patent branded and generic business) has been postponed until the second half of 2020 due to Covid-19. And Indian drugmaker Sun Pharma’s plant in Halol (Gujarat) got classified as OAI by the FDA. FDA highlights data-integrity concerns at Pfizer’s India unit; Mylan-Upjohn merger delayed   Last year, when the mega-merger of Mylan with Upjohn (Pfizer’s off-patent branded and generic established medicines business) was announced, PharmaCompass had highlighted how compliance would play a key role in determining the merger’s success. This week, Pfizer’s sterile manufacturing operations in India received a warning letter from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The site, located in Visakhapatnam (Andhra Pradesh, India), was inspected from August 29 to September 6, 2019. The warning letter highlights that Pfizer’s operations failed to conduct adequate investigations, including timely implementation of effective corrective action and preventive action (CAPA) plans. There was a failure to adequately investigate serious deficiencies in microbiology laboratory conditions and practices as microbial results were invalidated without adequate scientific justification. Laboratory data accuracy deficiencies were also cited by the FDA in a previous September 2018 inspection. As a result, the FDA recommended data-integrity remediation plans as it believed the site’s quality system did not adequately ensure the accuracy and integrity of data to support the safety, effectiveness and quality of the drugs that were being manufactured. The Visakhapatnam operation was acquired by Pfizer in February 2015, as part of its US$ 17 billion acquisition of Hospira. When the deal was struck, Pfizer was aware of Hospira’s manufacturing record as the company was issued FDA warning letters in four out of seven continents (Europe, North America, Asia and Australia). The executives of Pfizer had assured investors and regulators that they would quickly resolve issues at the plants. In January 2019, Pfizer went on to announce that two manufacturing sites in India, which were part of the Hospira acquisition, will cease manufacturing operations. At the time of the announcement, the sites located near Chennai (Irungattukottai) and Aurangabad employed 1,700 people.  The FDA warning letter for the operations at the Irungattukottai site stated that the agency had found the site’s microbiology laboratory was inaccurately reporting test results. Pfizer-Mylan merger delayed: The merger of Pfizer’s Upjohn unit and Mylan has been postponed until the second half of 2020. With the ongoing novel coronavirus pandemic, US regulators have warned that major corporate transaction reviews could be held up. In a statement, Mylan said the merger has been delayed due to “unprecedented circumstances surrounding the Covid-19 pandemic, including associated delays in the regulatory review process.” “The two companies remain highly confident in the benefits of the pending transaction to their respective shareholders and other stakeholders,” the statement added. The Upjohn-Mylan deal delay is the first instance of pharma pushing merger deadlines in response to the ongoing novel coronavirus pandemic. End of ranitidine? FDA requests removal of all product from market   Cancer-causing impurity N-nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA) is back in the news. In a statement issued this week, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) said it had found levels of the cancer-causing impurity NDMA in ranitidine increase over time. And when stored at higher room temperatures, it may result in consumer exposure to unacceptable levels of this impurity. As a result of this finding, the FDA has requested manufacturers to withdraw all prescription and over-the-counter (OTC) ranitidine drugs from the market immediately. Ranitidine is a widely used heartburn medication and is commonly known by the brand name Zantac. The drug is currently sold by French drugmaker Sanofi in the US and Canada after it acquired the drug from Boehringer in 2016. The trigger for the NDMA concerns in ranitidine was a citizen petition filed on behalf of an online pharmacy — Valisure — on September 9, 2019. The petition stated that while the FDA had established a permissible daily intake limit for the probable human carcinogen —  NDMA — of 96 nanograms (ng), Valisure had detected NDMA in excess of 3,000,000 ng per tablet when it analyzed ranitidine products, likely due to an inherent instability of the ranitidine molecule. The molecule contains both a nitrite and a dimethylamine (“DMA”) group, which is known to combine to form NDMA. Post the Valisure finding, many leading brand and generic manufacturers recalled their ranitidine drug products globally. The FDA tested numerous ranitidine tablets on the market over the past few months and released a summary of the results on November 1, 2019. The agency had indicated that if the NDMA levels were found to be above acceptable limits (96 ng per day or 0.32 ppm), they would ask companies to recall Ranitidine products voluntarily. There were companies like Strides Pharma Science in India that went on to re-launch their ranitidine tablets in the US as they stated that the level of NDMA in their product was found to be within acceptable limits. Valisure’s petition also tested other commonly used antacids for NDMA levels and detected elevated levels in another antacid containing nizatidine (sold under the brand name Axid). In order to provide patients with other treatment options, the FDA stated that to date, the FDA’s testing has not found NDMA in famotidine (Pepcid), cimetidine (Tagamet), esomeprazole (Nexium), lansoprazole (Prevacid) or omeprazole (Prilosec). Bristol Myers’ ozanimod bags FDA nod for MS, though Covid-19 delays its launch   Covid-19 is delaying drug launches. Last week, Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMS) said the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved its multiple sclerosis (MS) treatment — Zeposia (ozanimod). However, the launch of the drug would be delayed due to the coronavirus outbreak. The drug was added to BMS’s portfolio through its US$ 74 billion acquisition of Celgene last year. Its approval was one of the three conditions set for a potentially higher payout for Celgene investors. Despite the expectant delay, the approval brings the company into a highly lucrative MS market where rivals have recorded blockbuster sales. For instance, Novartis AG’s Gilenya brought in sales of over US$ 2 billion in 2019. Novartis’ new MS treatment, Mayzent, recorded sales of US$ 17 million in the first quarter of its launch. The FDA nod comes at a time when sales of BMS’s blockbuster cancer drug Opdivo have slowed under pressure from Merck’s Keytruda. “With the FDA approval of Zeposia, appropriate patients with relapsing forms of multiple sclerosis will have another oral treatment option with meaningful efficacy to help address the disease’s hallmark relapses and brain lesions,” said Samit Hirawat, chief medical officer, BMS. Analysts have high hopes from ozanimod. Its average peak sales for 2024 have been predicted to be at US$ 1.62 billion by Cortellis, though the Covid-19 pandemic may weigh in there as well. Chinese regulator suspends import of Bristol Myers’ blockbuster product from US   It’s usually the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) or the European Medicines Agency (EMA) that cites irregularities with drug companies overseas. In a rare event, Beijing-headquartered biopharmaceutical company BeiGene said it is being forced by Chinese officials to halt imports of the cancer drug Abraxane. According to BeiGene, the China National Medical Products Administration (NMPA) has ordered the halt following an inspection of one of Bristol Myers Squibb’s (BMS) facilities in the US that is used to manufacture the drug. The details of the inspection and the lapses on part of BMS are not known. However, BeiGene said it is trying to find another supplier for the drug, which it licensed from Celgene, as they try to resolve the issues raised by Chinese inspectors. Over the recent past, we have seen the US-China relations plummet with the US President Donald Trump putting pressure on China to make some fundamental changes in the way they handle exports to the US. “A recent inspection of the Chinese governmental body at a third-party manufacturing site that produces Abraxane for the China market identified opportunities for improvement. We are working closely with the Chinese health authorities and the manufacturing site to implement corrective actions and preventive measures to address their findings,” a BMS spokesperson said. Celgene, which is now a BMS company, entered into an exclusive license and supply agreement with BeiGene for Abraxane and two other cancer medicines in China in 2017 as part of a broader strategic collaboration. The drug had brought in sales of US$ 1.2 billion for BMS in 2019. “As the marketing agent for Abraxane in China, we are extremely disappointed by this interruption in drug supply,” John V Oyler, chairman, co-founder and CEO of BeiGene said. Sun Pharma’s Halol facility gets classified as OAI   The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has classified Indian drugmaker Sun Pharmaceutical’s Halol facility in Gujarat as Official Action Indicated (OAI). Sun Pharma is the world’s fourth largest specialty generic pharmaceutical company and India’s largest drug firm. OAI implies that pending product approval from the facility could be withheld by the regulator. Earlier in December, the plant had been issued a Form 483 by the FDA with eight observations. This has escalated into an OAI classification. According to Sun Pharma, the OAI classification implies that the FDA may withhold approval of any pending product applications or supplements filed from this facility till the outstanding observations are resolved. There are 19 abbreviated new drug applications (ANDAs) and two new drug applications (NDAs), which were filed from the Halol facility, currently awaiting approval for the US market. The company continues to manufacture and distribute existing products for the US market. Therefore, it is not likely to have any adverse impact on the current business from the facility. As of now, US supplies from Halol contribute approximately three to four percent of the company's consolidated revenues. In December, the company had said that it had been issued a Form 483 by the FDA with eight observations, post an inspection conducted by the agency at its Halol facility from December 3 to 13, 2019. The Form 483 had highlighted that Sun “failed to establish and implement controls which ensure data integrity” in the use of the environmental monitoring computerized system used in its microbiology laboratory for all samples including those that are used to establish a sterile manufacturing environment.  Sun Pharma has said it continues to cooperate with the FDA and will undertake all necessary steps to resolve these issues and to ensure that the regulator is completely satisfied with its remedial action.  

Impressions: 3650

https://www.pharmacompass.com/radio-compass-phisper/fda-highlights-data-integrity-concerns-at-pfizer-s-india-unit-fda-requests-removal-of-all-ranitidine-products

#Phispers by PHARMACOMPASS
02 Apr 2020

NEWS #PharmaBuzz

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http://www.koreabiomed.com/news/articleView.html?idxno=12902

KOREABIOMED
04 Jan 2022

https://www.pharmacompass.com/pdf/news/enforcement-report-week-of-may-6-2020-1588742806.pdf

FDA
06 May 2020

https://www.pharmacompass.com/pdf/news/health-canada-issues-recall-of-pendopharm-division-of-pharmasciences-axid-1588660442.pdf

HEALTH CANADA
04 May 2020
Amneal recalls ulcer drug on NDMA contamination fears
Amneal recalls ulcer drug on NDMA contamination fears

17 Apr 2020

// Kyle Blankenship FIERCE PHARMA

https://www.fiercepharma.com/manufacturing/amneal-yanks-nazitidine-solution-off-u-s-shelves-fears-possible-carcinogen

Kyle Blankenship FIERCE PHARMA
17 Apr 2020

https://www.pharmacompass.com/pdf/news/amneal-pharmaceuticalsissues-voluntary-nationwide-recall-of-nizatidine-oral-solution-1587446824.pdf

FDA
16 Apr 2020

https://www.pharmacompass.com/pdf/news/enforcement-report-week-of-january-29-2020-1580279088.pdf

FDA
29 Jan 2020