Preferred Plus Pharmacy Antacid Extra Strength (Aluminum Hydroxide 400mg, Magnesium Hydroxide 400...

FDA Drug Recall #D-0842-2018 — Class II — May 7, 2018

Recall Summary

Recall Number D-0842-2018
Classification Class II — Moderate risk
Date Initiated May 7, 2018
Status Terminated
Voluntary Voluntary: Firm initiated

Recalling Firm

Firm RIJ Pharmaceutical LLC
Location Middletown, NY
Product Type Drugs
Quantity 5043 bottles

Product Description

Preferred Plus Pharmacy Antacid Extra Strength (Aluminum Hydroxide 400mg, Magnesium Hydroxide 400mg, Simethicone 40 mg), packaged in 12 FL. OZ. (355 mL), Manufactured By: RIJ Pharmaceutical Corp.40 Commercial Avenue, Middletown, NY 10941, Distributed by: Kinray Inc. Whitestone, NY 11357 NDC 53807-158-12, UPC 353807158123

Reason for Recall

CGMP Deviations: Products are being recalled due to an out of specification total aerobic microbial count in a water sample.

Distribution Pattern

Nationwide in the USA

Lot / Code Information

Lot #: 707007, Exp. 07/19

Other Recalls from RIJ Pharmaceutical LLC

Recall # Classification Product Date
D-0850-2018 Class II Geritrex Senna Syrup (sennosides 8.8mg), packag... May 7, 2018
D-0845-2018 Class II RPC Children's Non-Aspirin (Acetaminophen 160 m... May 7, 2018
D-0846-2018 Class II Gericare Liquid Pain Relief Acetaminophen Cherr... May 7, 2018
D-0844-2018 Class II RPC Senna Syrup (Sennosides 8.8mg), packaged in... May 7, 2018
D-0853-2018 Class II Gericare Iron Supplement Elixir Ferrous Sulfate... May 7, 2018

Frequently Asked Questions

cGMP stands for Current Good Manufacturing Practice — the FDA's regulations governing drug manufacturing quality. A cGMP recall means the company failed to follow required manufacturing standards. This could involve inadequate testing, poor environmental controls, documentation failures, or process deviations. cGMP recalls do not always mean the product is directly harmful — in many cases, quality records are insufficient to confirm the product meets specifications. However, the FDA requires a recall because without proper documentation, product quality cannot be assured. These are often Class II or Class III recalls.

Not necessarily. Many drug recalls are initiated because of quality system failures or test results that suggest a product might not meet specifications — even if no patients have reported harm. The FDA uses a precautionary approach: if there is reason to believe quality standards were not met, a recall is required regardless of whether adverse effects have been reported. Class I recalls typically involve a reasonable probability of harm; Class II recalls may cause temporary health issues; Class III recalls are for products unlikely to cause adverse health consequences but that still violate regulations.

Pharmacies typically receive recall notices directly from drug wholesalers and manufacturers within days of the recall being announced. Your pharmacist can look up whether any product in your prescription history matches a recalled lot number. For current recalls, the FDA publishes updates at FDA.gov/safety/recalls-market-withdrawals-safety-alerts and sends MedWatch email alerts for significant drug safety issues. You can sign up for MedWatch alerts at FDA.gov. Most major pharmacy chains also have their own recall notification systems that automatically alert pharmacists when a recalled product is in their inventory.

What Should You Do?

Stop using this medication if affected by this recall. Contact your pharmacist or prescribing doctor immediately for guidance. Do not flush medications — use a drug take-back program.