Unease grows among U.S. doctors over Indian drug quality

 <http://www.reuters.com/> Description: Reuters

1 hour ago 

By Toni Clarke and Bill Berkrot

WASHINGTON/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Some U.S. doctors are becoming concerned
about the quality of generic drugs supplied by Indian manufacturers
following a flurry of recalls and import bans by the Food and Drug
Administration.

India supplies about 40 percent of generic and over-the-counter drugs used
in the United States, making it the second-biggest supplier after Canada.

In recent months, the FDA, citing quality control problems ranging from data
manipulation to sanitation, has banned the importation of products from
Ranbaxy Laboratories Ltd (NSI:RANBAXY.NS
<http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=ranbaxy.ns>  - News
<http://finance.yahoo.com/q/h?s=ranbaxy.ns> ), Wockhardt Ltd
(NSI:WOCKPHARMA) and, most recently, Sun Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd
(NSI:SUNPHARMA.NS <http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=sunpharma.ns>  - News
<http://finance.yahoo.com/q/h?s=sunpharma.ns> ).

"I'm just beginning to realize the gravity of the problem," said Dr. Steven
Nissen, head of cardiology at the Cleveland Clinic. "It's terrible and it is
starting to get a lot of traction among physicians."

Indian drugmakers are by no means the only companies to recall products or
be warned by the FDA about manufacturing problems. For instance, quality
control failures at Johnson & Johnson (NYS:JNJ
<http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=jnj>  - News
<http://finance.yahoo.com/q/h?s=jnj> ) forced the company to recall dozens
of products over the past five years, ranging from artificial hips to
children's Tylenol.

And last year, Germany's Boehringer Ingelheim said it would shut down its
U.S. contract manufacturing unit, Ben Venue Laboratories, after it was cited
for repeated manufacturing violations that led to shortages of the cancer
drug Doxil.

India's drugmakers, a $14 billion industry, reject any criticism that their
products are inferior to drugs made in other countries.

"We have heard doctors making generalized statements, without being specific
on any product or company," said D.G. Shah, Secretary General of the Indian
Pharmaceutical Alliance, a trade group representing large Indian drugmakers.
"This is a deliberate and serious campaign to malign the Indian generic
industry."

If U.S. doctors come across a medicine that does not meet quality standards,
they should report it to regulators, he said. "Doctors are not in a position
to judge whether manufacturing processes are correct or not. That is the
U.S. FDA's job."

Generic drugs account for nearly 85 percent of medicines prescribed in the
United States and the government is relying on them to help rein in
healthcare costs.

"We are losing control over what people are swallowing," said Dr. Harry
Lever, a cardiologist at the Cleveland Clinic who is trying raise awareness
of the matter among U.S. lawmakers. "Now, when a patient comes in who is not
doing well, the first thing I do is look at their drugs and find out who
makes it."

Increasingly, Lever said, he is recommending patients seek out generic drugs
from specific manufacturers outside India.

"I'm tending to stay away from India," he said. "There's something wrong.
Too many things are happening."

INDIA DOCTORS HIT BACK

Indian physicians do not share the concerns.

"Our drugs are being sold in many countries and being accepted, so we have
no issues," said Narendra Saini, Secretary General of the Indian Medical
Association, a voluntary body of 215,000 doctors. "How do I know that
Western drugs are better than our drugs?"

A 2012 report by India's parliament alleged collusion between pharmaceutical
firms and officials at the Central Drugs Standard Control Organization
(CDSCO), the country's drugs regulator, and described an agency that was
both understaffed and underqualified.

Saini said physicians trust that the CDSCO is taking care of the quality and
the standard of the drugs made in India.

"We very much trust those medicines," he added.

Representatives of Ranbaxy, Sun and Wockhardt were not immediately available
to comment.

Dr. Joel Zonszein, director of the Clinical Diabetes Center at Montefiore
Medical Center in New York, said he is concerned about the quality of
generic drugs in general, not just those from India. He cited, as an
example, his experience with the diabetes drug metformin.

"When patients open the bottle of medication it smells like dead fish," he
said. Zonszein did not know which company made the foul-smelling drug.

Physicians do not have a say in which generic drug a patient receives, as
that depends on which products are stocked by individual pharmacies. If a
patient wants to avoid a certain manufacturer, he or she may have to change
pharmacies.

Doctors may specify that the branded version of a drug be dispensed, but
insurance companies frequently refuse to pay for them.

Dr. Richard Kovacs, who heads a number of American College of Cardiology
committees and sits on its board of trustees, said doctors may need to play
a greater role monitoring the medications prescribed by their practices.

"The average U.S. cardiologist has been able to assume that the drugs were
safe and effective. It now appears we need to be more vigilant as a
profession, and assist the FDA by reporting cases where we are concerned
about irregularities in the drugs supplied to our patients," he said.

HARD TO KEEP UP

FDA Commissioner Margaret Hamburg, who recently returned from her first
official visit to India, is urging greater collaboration between the two
countries. During her visit, the FDA and India's Ministry of Health and
Family Welfare signed a statement of intent to cooperate to prevent the
distribution of unsafe drugs.

Shortly afterwards, India's drug controller general, G.N. Singh, said in an
interview that the country will follow its own quality standards.

"The FDA may regulate its country, but it can't regulate India on how India
has to behave or how to deliver," he said.

Some companies seem to be responding to the FDA's actions.

Piyush Nahar, an analyst with Jefferies India Private Ltd who recently met
with a number of Indian drugmakers, said in a recent report that most
companies "have increased their investment" in compliance and some are
considering investing in U.S. or European facilities "to overcome challenges
relating to both regulations and perceptions."

The array of recalls and warning letters can be dizzying.

Ranbaxy recently recalled more than 64,000 bottles of a generic
cholesterol-lowering drug after doses were mixed up in a bottle, and Sun
began recalling 2,528 bottles of a diabetes drug after a bottle was found to
contain an epilepsy treatment.

Those mix-ups follow a recall in January by Dr. Reddy's Laboratories Ltd
(NSI:DRREDDY.NS <http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=drreddy.ns>  - News
<http://finance.yahoo.com/q/h?s=drreddy.ns> ) of more than 58,000 bottles of
its heartburn drug lansoprazole due to a microbial contamination.

"It's hard to be sure on a day-to-day basis with the array of medications
that you have to be potentially aware of that there's a specific problem
with a specific medication from a specific generic manufacturer," said Dr.
Elliott Antman, a cardiologist at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston.

The medical community is dependent on agencies such as the FDA, he added.
"The bottom line for me is we have to make sure they have sufficient
resources to do their job correctly."

To Dr. Jason Gaglia, a diabetes expert at the Joslin Diabetes Center in
Boston, the warning letters and import bans indicate the FDA is doing its
job.

"Is it scary? Yes. But to me it means the system is working," he said.

(Reporting by Toni Clarke in Washington and Bill Berkrot in New York;
Additional reporting by Zeba Siddiqui in Mumbai; Editing by Michele
Gershberg, Frank McGurty and Eric Walsh)

 

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"With Yoweri Museveni and Dr. Kiiza Besigye Uganda is in anarchy"
           Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
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