Here are the full, verified details behind the recent prazosin recall—this is a real event, but the headlines often make it sound scarier than it is.
⚠️ What Was Recalled
- The medication: Prazosin hydrochloride capsules (used for high blood pressure and sometimes PTSD-related symptoms)
- Strengths affected: 1 mg, 2 mg, and 5 mg
- Amount: Over 580,000 bottles across multiple batches (HMP Global Learning Network)
🧪 Why the Recall Happened
- Testing found a chemical impurity called N-nitroso prazosin impurity C
- This belongs to a group called nitrosamines, which are considered potentially cancer-causing (HMP Global Learning Network)
- The levels found were above the FDA’s acceptable safety limits (Pharmacy Times)
👉 Important:
This doesn’t mean the drug will cause cancer—just that long-term exposure above limits could increase risk.
🏷️ Recall Classification
- The recall was labeled Class II by the FDA
- This means:
- Possible temporary or reversible health effects
- Low likelihood of serious harm (Health)
📦 Who Was Involved
- Manufacturer: Teva Pharmaceuticals USA
- Distributor: American Health Packaging / Amerisource
- Distributed mainly in the United States (nationwide) (HMP Global Learning Network)
👤 What Patients Should Do
- ✅ Do NOT stop taking prazosin suddenly (can cause rebound high blood pressure) (Pharmacy Times)
- ✅ Check your bottle’s lot number and expiration date
- ✅ Contact your doctor or pharmacist for guidance
- ✅ Replace recalled medication if necessary
💡 Key Reality Check
- No widespread reports of harm from this recall
- The risk is mainly from long-term exposure, not short-term use
- Recalls like this are precautionary safety measures
✅ TL;DR
- Over 580,000 bottles of prazosin were recalled
- Reason: possible contamination with a cancer-linked impurity
- Risk level: low (Class II recall)
- Action: check your medication and consult your doctor—don’t stop abruptly
If you want, I can help you check whether your specific prazosin (by label/lot) might be part of the recall.