NEW DELHI: India has banned the manufacture and sale of more
than 300 combination medicines, including two widely used cough syrups,
being sold without government approval, a senior health ministry
official said on Saturday.
The move is aimed at curbing the misuse of such medicines in India,
where nearly half the drugs sold in 2014 were so called "fixed dose
combinations."
Combination drugs are used worldwide to improve patients' compliance,
as it is easier to get patients to take one drug rather than several.
But inconsistent enforcement of drug laws in India has led to the
proliferation of hundreds of such medicines entering the market based on
approval from regulators of individual states, rather than the central
government.
In 2014, India set up a committee to review more than 6,000
combinations that had entered the market based only on state regulators'
approval. Policymakers gave pharmaceutical companies a chance to
retroactively prove the safety and efficacy of these drugs by submitting
data on their drugs.
The committee was tasked with classifying the drugs into rational,
irrational, and those that need further studies, said KL Sharma, a joint
secretary at the health ministry.
"Now based on responses (and) assessment of products, more than 300 drugs have been prohibited," he told Reuters.
He did not name the medicines, but said an official notice announcing
the ban would be issued "in a few days." The Drug Controller General of
India was not immediately available to comment.
The banned medicines include the codeine-based cough syrups
Phensedyl and Corex, the Times of India said in a report earlier on
Saturday, citing unnamed sources.
Phensedyl, made by U.S. drugmaker Abbott Laboratories,
accounts for about a third of the Indian cough syrup market, and its
sales are estimated to make up more than 3 percent of Abbott's US$1
billion India revenue. Corex is sold by Pfizer Inc.
Reuters reported last October that Indian regulators were
privately pressuring drug firms to better police the selling of popular
codeine-based cough syrups to tackle smuggling and addiction.
Neither company responded to requests for comment on Saturday.
Doctors and public health experts in India and abroad have
warned that increasing use of antibiotic combinations in India may be
contributing to antibiotic resistance. India is a particular concern as
the market share of combination drugs versus single drugs is bigger than
anywhere in the world.
Reuters reported in December how a powerful antibiotic cocktail being
marketed in India by a unit of Abbott and many other local companies
did not carry approval from the central government.
The combination was not approved for sale in major markets such as
the United States, United Kingdom, Germany, France, Japan and Australia.
Several medical experts said it did not make sense to
prescribe the cocktail for cold symptoms. However, Abbott's former and
current medical representatives said the combination was being promoted
and administered as a treatment for a wide variety of illnesses,
including colds and fevers.
(Writing by Zeba Siddiqui; Editing by Clelia Oziel)
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