That headline is mixing real news with misleading details—let’s separate fact from hype.
🔎 What actually happened
There was a recall involving ~600,000 bottles of a blood pressure drug, but:
- It was NOT Metoprolol
- The drug was prazosin hydrochloride
- The issue was nitrosamine contamination (a potential cancer-causing impurity) (Fast Company)
👉 About 590,000 bottles were recalled after tests found levels of a probable carcinogen above FDA limits (Fast Company)
⚠️ Why “cancer-causing” sounds scarier than it is
Nitrosamines:
- Are potential carcinogens, not guaranteed to cause cancer
- Risk depends on dose + long-term exposure
- These recalls are often precautionary
The FDA classified this as a Class II recall, meaning:
- Temporary or low risk of serious harm
- Not an immediate life-threatening situation (Fast Company)
💊 What about Metoprolol specifically?
There have been recalls involving Metoprolol, but for different reasons:
- Around 100,000+ bottles recalled in 2026
- Cause: tablets not dissolving properly (quality issue)
- Risk: reduced effectiveness—not cancer (HMP Global Learning Network)
There was also an older (2025) recall of a different form of metoprolol due to nitrosamines, but:
- It was much smaller
- Not the “600,000 bottles” headline you saw (HMP Global Learning Network)
🧠 Bottom line
- ✔️ The “600,000 bottles + cancer risk” story is real
- ❌ But it’s about a different drug (prazosin), not metoprolol
- ❌ And the risk is potential and precautionary, not a confirmed danger to users
🚨 What you should do (if you’re concerned)
- Don’t panic or stop meds suddenly
- Check:
- Drug name (metoprolol vs prazosin)
- Manufacturer and batch/lot
- Ask your pharmacist if unsure
If you want, tell me the exact medicine you’re taking (name + dose), and I can check whether your specific version has ever been recalled or flagged.