FDA
Requests Recall of Xiadafil VIP Tabs 5-27-08
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 27, 2008
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Media Inquiries:
Rita Chappelle, 301-827-6242
Consumer Inquiries:
888-INFO-FDA
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FDA
Requests Recall of Xiadafil VIP Tabs
Product contains undeclared
ingredient that puts consumer health at risk
The U.S. Food and
Drug Administration today requested that SEI Pharmaceuticals, of Miami, Fla.,
recall all Xiadafil VIP Tabs sold in 8 tablet bottles (Lot # 6K029) or blister
cards of 2 tablets (Lot # 6K029-SEI) because these products contain a
potentially harmful, undeclared ingredient that may dangerously affect a
person's blood pressure and can cause other life-threatening side effects. These
lots of Xiadafil VIP Tabs bear an expiration date of September 2009 (09/09).
Xiadafil VIP Tabs are marketed as a
dietary
supplement for sexual enhancement and able to treat erectile
dysfunction (ED).
Today's formal
request follows an action by the state of Florida to prevent the further
distribution of this product into consumer channels. FDA is advising consumers
not to buy or use this product. The agency may take further regulatory action to
protect consumers from this illegal product.
Although labeled as
a dietary supplement and touted as "all-natural," Xiadafil VIP Tabs are an
illegally marketed drug that contains a potentially harmful undeclared
ingredient. FDA chemical analysis revealed that Xiadafil VIP Tabs contains
hydroxyhomosildenafil, which is an analog of sildenafil, the active ingredient
in
Viagra, an FDA-approved prescription drug for ED.
This undeclared
ingredient may interact with nitrates found in some prescription drugs (such as
nitroglycerin) and can lower blood pressure to life-threatening levels.
Consumers with diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, or heart disease
often take nitrates. ED is a common problem in men with these medical
conditions.
"Because these
products are labeled as ‘all natural dietary supplements,' consumers may assume
that they are harmless and pose no health risk," said Janet Woodcock, M.D.,
director of the FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research. "But an
unsuspecting consumer with underlying medical issues may take these products
without knowing that they can cause serious side effects and interact in
dangerous ways with drugs that a consumer is already taking."
The FDA has not
approved Xiadafil VIP Tabs for ED or any other drug use, and the safety and
effectiveness of this product is unknown. The product is promoted and sold over
the Internet, was given away as free samples at trade shows, and is sold in
health
food
stores nationwide. The product may be packaged in bottles of
eight tablets or blister cards of two tablets.
On May 13, 2008
Florida officials issued a "stop sale" action at SEI's distribution facility in
Miami, Fla. This action required the firm to hold, intact, violative Xiadafil
VIP Tabs found on-hand at the facility. The state of Florida's action to
control the supply of the product, coupled with today's formal request by FDA to
recall this product from the marketplace, will further reduce the likelihood
that this potentially dangerous product is used by unsuspecting consumers.
Alternative products
like Xiadafil VIP Tabs are often sought out because they are marketed as "all
natural" or as not containing the active ingredients in approved, prescribed ED
drugs. Because the manufacturing source of the active ingredients in many of
these alternative products is unknown, consumers should also be aware that the
safety, efficacy, and purity of these ingredients have not been verified by the
FDA.
The FDA advises
consumers who have used this product to discontinue use immediately and consult
their health care professional if they have experienced any adverse events that
they believe may be related to the use of this product.
Consumers and health
care professionals can report adverse events to the FDA's MedWatch program at
800-FDA-1088, by mail at MedWatch, HF-2, FDA, 5600 Fishers Lane, Rockville, MD
20852-9787 or online at
www.fda.gov/medwatch/report.htm.
Additionally, the
FDA recommends that consumers talk to their health care professional about
FDA-approved treatments for ED.
For more
information, visit:
www.fda.gov/consumer/updates/erectiledysfunction010408.html.
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