OEP Philippines Orders Recall Of Angina Drug

OEP Philippines has ordered a recall of batches of its Aprior (nicorandil) drug for treating angina after samples were found by the Italian Medicines Agency to have failed good manufacturing practice guidelines.

OEP Philippines ordered a recall of batches of its Aprior (nicorandil) drug for treating angina after samples were found by the Italian Medicines Agency to have failed good manufacturing practice (GMP) guidelines. The OEP drug is available in several countries under different names, but not in the U.S. Nicorandil is used to treat ischemic heart disease. (Click here for more

Read the full article – start your free trial today!

Join thousands of industry professionals who rely on Scrip for daily insights

  • Start your 7-day free trial
  • Explore trusted news, analysis, and insights
  • Access comprehensive global coverage
  • Enjoy instant access – no credit card required

More from Focus On Asia

Zai’s R&D Head Touts ‘Beauty’ Of Novel Internal Assets

 

Two potentially first-in-class molecules signify Zai Lab’s renewed drive for the in-house discovery of drugs that it requires “to be innovative, differentiated and to have the potential to make a big difference for patients,” its global R&D head tells Scrip.

CSPC’s Global-First Monospecific ADC Promising In Advanced NSCLC

 
• By 

CSPC’s SYS6010, the first monospecific EGFR-targeting antibody-drug conjugate in the clinic for advanced NSCLC, has shown Phase I promise, but could face close competition with another China-originated bispecific.

NIH Funding Cut Left Less Money On R&D Table, Tariffs Would Add To Woes: Aragen’s CEO

 
• By 

Funding cuts at the National Institutes of Health, big pharma’s US onshoring moves, GCC partnerships and talks with the Indian government to solve intellectual property challenges are discussed in an interview with Aragen’s CEO, who is also keenly watching the Trump administration’s moves on pharma tariffs

Akeso Explains Ivonescimab Prelim OS Data After Investors’ Negative Reactions

 

Akeso explains the circumstances behind the release of preliminary overall survival data from a head-to-head Phase III trial with ivonescimab in lung cancer, which some investors viewed as disappointing.

More from Scrip

BridgeBio Takes A Victory Lap With First Full Quarter Of Attruby Sales

 
• By 

BridgeBio reported $36.7m in Q1 2025 sales of its ATTR-CM drug Attruby, tripling consensus forecasts. Vyndaquel-maker Pfizer acknowledged the product’s impact during the quarter.

Novartis Gains Further Renal Territory With Regulus Acquisition

 

The San Diego biotech’s lead product candidate is an antisense oligonucleotide-based therapy slated to enter Phase III development in the third quarter.

J&J’s Imaavy Approval Is The Starting Line For Pipeline-In-A-Product Strategy

 

The company’s FcRn inhibitor nipocalimab was approved by the US FDA for generalized myasthenia gravis (gMG), where it will join a competitive market.