It *could* be due to surface contamination, from poor storage or production line. Try thoroughly cleaning the board that's drawing 150uA: If you don't have a swept frequency ultrasonic cleaner, soak in IPA or solvent flux remover, scrub thoroughly with a brush that wont cause ESD, then scrub under hot water with a trace of detergent (mostly just as a wetting agent), rinse, rinse again with distilled water, shake off as much as possible then rinse with IPA, shake and let dry. Once visibly dry, put it in a clean very warm (but not over 95 deg C) place for 24H to let any remaining moisture and/or solvents evaporate off. If you do have a suitable ultrasonic cleaner, use it for the hot water wash stage.
The next thing to try would be, taking full ESD precautions, to desolder the good and not-so-good chips (don't get them mixed up) and fit brand new ones, purchased from MicrochipDirect or an official distributor, then thoroughly clean as above.
If the problem stays with the bad board you can investigate other components on it. If it goes away, your new supplier has bad chips, and if both are now bad, and you put back the known good chip and its still good, its looking increasingly like a specification change or batch problem so contact Microchip technical support, (but have all your ducks in a row as front-line support is usually swamped by idiots)!