Cordlife Group faces one-year suspension over cord-blood banking service lapses
This is the latest setback for the company following its mishandling of cord-blood units in 2023
[SINGAPORE] Cordlife Group has been served a notice of intent for a one-year suspension of its cord-blood banking services by the Ministry of Health (MOH), after a recent audit uncovered significant failures in its operations.
The suspension was triggered by an MOH audit in July this year, which found that Cordlife had failed to maintain compliance with regulatory requirements in several key areas. This inspection came after the company had been allowed to resume limited operations in September 2024, following an earlier suspension.
The notice, issued on Monday (Sep 29), requires the cord-blood bank to stop collecting, testing, processing and storing new cord blood units and to focus solely on safeguarding its existing inventory.
Cordlife has 14 days to submit its representations.
This is the latest setback for the company, whose mishandling of cord-blood units first came to light in November 2023, when MOH conducted unannounced audits on the company.
Then, it was revealed that seven of the 22 tanks at Cordlife were exposed to temperatures above acceptable limits during different periods from November 2020. This damaged the cord-blood units belonging to at least 2,150 clients.
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In December 2023, Cordlife was ordered to halt its services for six months. This restriction was extended by three months in June 2024. The company was allowed to resume limited services on Sep 15, 2024.
Following the audit in July this year, and in line with the latest notice of intent, MOH has directed the company to review all laboratory records of new cord-blood units collected since the resumption of its cord-blood banking services in January 2025, and to identify and resolve deviations from Cordlife’s established policies.
Cordlife must inform clients if their cord-blood units have been affected, and offer counselling by a haematologist on the implications on the potential clinical uses of the cord-blood unit.
In a statement, MOH said it “recognises that these findings may be distressing to many Cordlife clients, and they may now be contemplating withdrawal of their cord-blood units from Cordlife”.
The ministry has urged Cordlife to proactively engage with clients and address their concerns, including on issues relating to their contracts.