No Toxins Found in Recalled Children's Cough Syrup: SAHPRA
An investigation by South Africa's Health Products Regulatory Authority found no trace of toxins in two recalled batches of children's cough syrup made by Johnson & Johnson. No adverse events were reported. Kenvue, the current owner of the Benylin brand, affirmed the safety of the recalled batches.
(Adds context and Kenvue statement in paragraphs 2, 5, 6-7) JOHANNESBURG, June 5 (Reuters) -
An investigation into two recalled batches of children's cough syrup made in South Africa by Johnson & Johnson found no trace of a toxin, and no adverse events have been reported from consuming the syrup, the country's drug regulator said on Wednesday. The South African Health Products Regulatory Authority issued the recall in April, days after Nigeria's regulator recalled the medicine - a batch of Benylin Paediatric Syrup made in South Africa - over an unacceptably high level of a potentially deadly toxic substance, diethylene glycol.
No adverse events have so far been reported in South Africa or other African countries relating to the syrup, though Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania and Zimbabwe also issued recalls. "SAHPRA also wishes to indicate that there is no record of any adverse drug reactions relating to diethylene glycol for the two recalled batches in South Africa or anywhere else where they were exported to on the continent," the regulator said in a statement.
Kenvue, which owns the Benylin brand after a spinoff from J&J last year, said its own tests of the recalled batches found no trace of either diethylene glycol or another closely linked toxin, ethylene glycol. "We welcome the statement by SAHPRA reaffirming the safety of the batches of Benylin Paediatric Syrup that were subject to the recall," it said in a statement.
The contaminant diethylene glycol, and ethylene glycol, have been linked to the deaths of more than 300 children in Cameroon, Gambia, Indonesia and Uzbekistan since 2022. There is no evidence that those incidents were linked with the recalls in April.
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