India: the pharmacy of the world where ‘crazy drug combinations’ go unregulated
This article by Patricia McGettigan, Senior Lecturer in Clinical
Pharmacology at Queen Mary University of London highlights the rampant practice
of combination drugs in India.
India has been called the pharmacy of the
world. Many generic drugs are made there and much of its drug
production is exported internationally. Thousands of fixed dose combination
(FDC) drugs – where two or more drugs are combined in a set ratio in a single
dose form, usually a tablet or capsule – are formulated, made and sold within
India.
Many FDCs are safe and effective. They are
used in situations where both the drug combination and the doses needed are
standardised and stable, for example, in the treatment of HIV, for Parkinson’s
disease and in contraceptive pills.
However, in a study investigating these drugs
in India, we found thousands of FDCs on the market made up of formulations
never approved for marketing by the national regulator, the Central Drugs
Standard Control Organisation, and that were likely to be more harmful than
beneficial to patients.
As two pharmacologists in India, writing in
response to the study put it:
“One
can find any crazy drug combination which could give nightmares to any doctor
who has some understanding of the concept of the rational use of medicine. It is
simply beyond comprehension of any rationalist. Even antimicrobials are being
combined weirdly, which is a grave challenge for crusaders against
antimicrobial resistance.”
FDCs
in India
Considered an innovation of India’s national
pharmaceutical industry, FDCs are promoted extensively and used in huge numbers
within the country. These drugs are mostly available through wholesalers,
pharmacies (not necessarily with a prescription), dispensing doctors, but some
are used in hospitals too.
For years though, there has been disquiet. In
2007, the national regulator banned 294 of the drugs because they had never
been approved for marketing but had been given manufacturing licenses by
authorities. FDC manufacturers disputed the ban and the matter remains unresolved
in the courts. In 2012, an Indian government committee investigating the
standards and capacity of the regulator issued a report highlighting multiple
problems, including FDC approvals.
The committee found state authorities were
issuing manufacturing licenses for new formulations that were never approved.
It said: “The end result is that many FDCs in the market have not been tested
for efficacy and safety. This can put patients at risk”. Many formulations were
also medically unnecessary.
The report noted that “ambiguities” in the
rules on new drugs prior to an amendment to existing legislation in May 2002
might have encouraged the marketing of FDCs without approval. However, we
identified no ambiguities in the drug rules and found that just as many unapproved
new FDCs appeared on the market after the amendment as before.
The
scale of the issue
The committee’s report included no
investigation of the size of the problem or potential risks to patients, so we
used drug approval records (1961-2013) and commercial sales data (2007-2012) to
identify approved and unapproved FDCs on the market and calculate the
quantities being sold.
We examined four areas: pain-relief,
diabetes, anxiety/depression, and psychosis. We chose these because the drugs
are commonly used and many, even when used alone, have serious side effects.
In the four areas, we found 175 FDC
formulations on the market, 115 (66%) with no record of approval. Metformin
drugs for diabetes had the best approval compliance, anti-psychotics the worst.
FDC formulations give rise to many branded
products made by different pharmaceutical companies, each promoting their own
products in a crowded marketplace. Among anti-inflammatories, there were almost
3,000 branded products, with more than 1,000 of them made from unapproved
formulations. Vast volumes of these FDC products are sold in India.
Banned
or restricted in other countries
Among the products on the market, we found
numerous combinations containing drugs that are banned or restricted in other
countries. Some of these were formulations actually approved by the regulator,
others were unapproved. They included, for example, melitracen, an
antidepressant widely banned owing to central nervous system toxicity (in India
its top-selling combination with flupentixol, an anti-psychotic, was banned in
2013, re-approved, then banned again in 2014, and nimesulide, an analgesic also
widely banned due to its association with liver toxicity and put under sales
restrictions in 2007 by the European Medicines Agency.
Several anti-inflammatories included a muscle
relaxant drug banned because of damage to dividing cells in the body while yet
others contained two types of anti-inflammatory together, giving no advantage
for pain but increasing the risk of serious side effects including bleeding in
the stomach and heart attack.
Some combinations were potentially lethal,
for example, an anti-psychotic containing two drugs from the same class, both
individually associated with major toxicity including sudden death. Dozens of
antidepressant and benzodiazepines included combinations of sedating drugs
shown individually to increase the risk of falls and accidents.
Response
and remedy
Following the committee report in 2012, the
Indian government made attempts to improve FDC regulation. But there was little
enforcement. In fact, manufacturers lobbied against regulatory change, making
“an earnest appeal” to government to “maintain status quo”, both approved and
unapproved, marketed up to September 2012. And that is exactly what has
happened.
It is clear from our research that drug
regulation in India, a key international exporter of medicines, needs a major
overhaul. Unapproved FDCs should be banned and patients transferred to
appropriate single drugs. Public health, not manufacturers’ commercial
concerns, should inform the regulation of India’s drugs.
But all too often, as we have found, business
comes first and citizens are the losers. Alongside Indian medical and legal
colleagues, we are now working to see unapproved FDCs banned once and for all
and to draft a new drugs act for India. With strong and clear legislation, a
most important step will be taken to ensure that in the long term the people of
India have safe and effective drugs made in their country.
Source: http://theconversation.com/india-the-pharmacy-of-the-world-where-crazy-drug-combinations-go-unregulated-42386
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