Sodium Chloride Injection
FDA Recall NDC 0019-1188

FDA Enforcement Report: View Recall Date, Reasons, and Safety Status

Active & Historical Enforcement Reports

The FDA has identified 1 recorded enforcement report(s) associated with Sodium Chloride (NDC 0019-1188). A significant event, classified as Class III, was initiated on Sep 13, 2019 by Liebel-flarsheim Company Llc. The reported reason for this action was: "Labeling: Not Elsewhere Classified: RFID formatting error which reads product in Ultraject syringe as expired and will not allow injection of product by the Optivantage injector."

This specific recall has a current status of TERMINATED, indicating that the FDA considers the recall process finished or the product successfully recovered.

Reported Recall Events

September 2019 Class III Recall: Labeling

Recall Number
Class III Terminated
Reason for Recall
Labeling: Not Elsewhere Classified: RFID formatting error which reads product in Ultraject syringe as expired and will not allow injection of product by the Optivantage injector.
Initiated
Sep 13, 2019
Reported
Oct 16, 2019
Quantity
3140 syringes

Recall Profile & Regulatory Data

Event ID
83798
Classification
Class III
Enforcement Status
Terminated
Recalling Firm
GUERBET LLC
Voluntary / Mandated
Voluntary: Firm initiated
Distribution Pattern
Nationwide in the USA
Termination Date
Oct 25, 2021
Product Description
Sodium Chloride Injection USP 0.9%, packaged in 1 - 125 mL Ultraject Prefilled Syringe For Power Injection per carton, RFID Technology, Rx Only, Manufactured by: Liebel-Flarshelm Company, LLC., Raleigh, NC 27616; NDC 0019-1188-27.
Batch or Lot Expiration Information
Lot# Lots: L159A, Exp. 06/2021; L169A, Exp. 07/2021
Affected Packages Involved in this Recall
0019-1188-81Product
0019-1188-27Product

About FDA Recall Enforcement Reports

FDA recall data documents classified recall actions associated with a product. Most recalls are limited to specific lots, batches, or package configurations rather than every unit of a drug.

If a recall is listed for an NDC, review the affected lot information and package details carefully. Patients and healthcare professionals should confirm whether a specific product in hand matches the lot or package information before assuming it is affected.