Ciprofloxacin Tablet, Film Coated
FDA Recall NDC 16571-412

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 Ciprofloxacin (NDC 16571-412). A significant event, classified as Class III, was initiated on Mar 09, 2012 by Rising Pharma Holdings, Inc.. The reported reason for this action was: "Labeling Illegible: Missing Label; The voluntary recall of the aforementioned batch of product is being initiated due to two bottles missing container labels."

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

March 2012 Class III Recall: Labeling Illegible

Recall Number
Class III Terminated
Reason for Recall
Labeling Illegible: Missing Label; The voluntary recall of the aforementioned batch of product is being initiated due to two bottles missing container labels.
Initiated
Mar 09, 2012
Reported
Jul 25, 2012
Quantity
4,848 bottles

Recall Profile & Regulatory Data

Event ID
51880
Classification
Class III
Enforcement Status
Terminated
Recalling Firm
Pack Pharmaceuticals
Voluntary / Mandated
Voluntary: Firm initiated
Distribution Pattern
Nationwide
Termination Date
Jul 19, 2012
Product Description
Ciprofloxacin Tablets, USP, 500 mg, Rx Only, 100 Tablets per Bottle, Manufactured in India by: Unique Pharmaceutical Laboratories (A Division of J.B. Chemicals & Pharmaceuticals Ltd.), Mumbai - 400 030, Distributed by: PACK Pharmaceuticals, LLC, Buffalo Grove, IL 60089, NDC 16571-412-10.
Batch or Lot Expiration Information
Lot# : : PUB1040, Exp 08/2015
Affected Packages Involved in this Recall
16571-411-10Product
16571-412-10Product
16571-412-50Product
16571-413-05Product

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.