Coca-Cola recalls Minute Maid 'Zero Sugar' Lemonade due to mislabeling error

Bottles of Minute Maid Lemonade move down a production line at a Coco-Cola bottling plant on February 10, 2017 in Salt Lake City, Utah. (Photo by George Frey/Getty Images)

Coca-Cola is voluntarily recalling its Minute Maid ‘Zero Sugar’ lemonade over concerns of mislabeling. 

The Food and Drug Administration announced the recall, saying several cans of Minute Maid Lemonades, containing sugar, were mistakenly placed in boxes that said the lemonade had "zero sugar."

The affected products are in cartons with the codes: FEB1725CNA or FEB1725CNB. The UPC code is 0 25000 12115 9.

The products were shipped to Indiana, Kentucky and Ohio.

RELATED: Giant supplier to Costco, Target and more recalling 10M pounds of meat: What to know

 The FDA labeled the recall as a "Class II" which means it "involves a health hazard situation where there is a remote probability of adverse health consequences from use of the product."

According to Yahoo!News, Coca-Cola said  "so impacted product remains in the market, and all recall activities in those markets are complete."

Customers who have the affected product are advised to discard or return the product for a refund. 

RecallsFood and DrinkFood and DrinkNews