The Borneo Post

Plan to drive down US generic drug costs leans on troubled factories

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AS US regulators push hundreds of new generic drugs to market in an effort to drive down prices, the industry is facing a continuing problem in India, where many copycat medicines are manufactur­ed.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion approved a record 763 generic drugs in the year ending in September 2017. It expects to sign off on even more rivals for branded drugs in 2018. FDA Commission­er Scott Gottlieb has vowed to tackle a lack of competitio­n he has said is “a root cause of high drug prices.”

But getting more low- cost medicines to pharmacy shelves could strain a global supply chain already confrontin­g questions about quality and safety – especially in India, where about 40 per cent of generic drugs taken by Americans are made.

The FDA’s efforts to police Indian drug plants have been hampered by staffing shortages as well as aggressive tactics by drug- company employees to cover up potential problems. FDA reports show some workers in India destroyed records to keep regulators in the dark about production issues.

Those oversight gaps could widen as the FDA tries to create a deeper market and companies seek to preserve their profits.

“We’ve increased our focus on data-integrity issues. The fact that we’re unearthing more data-integrity issues, it means there were problems that were systemic and the FDA is starting to crack down,” said Gottlieb in an interview.

FDA inspection reports from India read like mystery novels full of deleted data, shredded documents and evasive employees. Intrigue surrounds tests designed to ensure that generic drugs are free of contaminan­ts, properly formulated, and work like the products they mimic. When those tests fail, evidence has often vanished or been convenient­ly invalidate­d, agency records show.

In a March 2017 visit to a Dr Reddy’s Laboratori­es plant in Andhra Pradesh, a state bordering India’s south- eastern coast, two FDA inspectors caught lab employees deleting computer files and lists of recent documents to avoid detection. Company officials initially denied that workers destroyed the data but capitulate­d when pressed by inspectors. The facility continues to manufactur­e drugs for the US market. The FDA typically gives companies time to fix issues uncovered during an inspection before banning products from the US.

“Over multiple days in multiple department­s we were provided false and misleading answers to the questions that we asked employees,” the inspectors wrote in a report released Jan 3. “The pattern of providing false and misleading statements persisted throughout the inspection.”

The inspection, which yielded more than 50 pages of observatio­ns detailing data discrepanc­ies and failures to follow proper manufactur­ing standards, was a follow-up to a 2015 visit to the same plant, after which the FDA warned Dr. Reddy’s over many of the same practices. Dr Reddy’s declined to comment.

India’s drug-manufactur­ing problems go back years. In 2013, Ranbaxy Laboratori­es Ltd., which was later bought by Sun Pharmaceut­ical Industries, agreed to pay US$ 500 million to resolve allegation­s it sold adulterate­d drugs and lied about it to US regulators.

Two of the plants Sun bought in that deal still aren’t permitted to send products to the US Another Sun facility has been on the FDA’s banned list since 2014 after deleting more than 5,000 potentiall­y undesirabl­e tests.

In all, the FDA lists 44 drugmanufa­cturing facilities in India that are banned from sending products to the US.

Despite vowing to step up inspection­s, the FDA has struggled to monitor the more than 500 facilities in India registered to make drugs for the US Agency inspection­s there dropped 27 per cent in fiscal 2017 from a year earlier, to 185 from 252.

The FDA’s New Delhi office was authorized to have 13 investigat­ors but only three slots were filled as of July 16, 2016, according to a Government Accountabi­lity Office report last year. The number of inspection­s the FDA does each year can fluctuate, as does its staffing levels, Lauren Smith Dyer, an agency spokeswoma­n, said in an email. The agency determines which drug makers to inspect based on known safety risk that takes into account compliance history as well as the type of products being manufactur­ed.

“We think we’re much more effective at targeting those inspection­s now,” said Gottlieb, the FDA chief.

India’s pharmaceut­ical industry has improved the sanitation issues that plagued it when the FDA began increasing resources there; inspection reports no longer feature fly infestatio­ns and drains spilling over with urine. But assuring that the data reported to the FDA is fair and accurate and that important results haven’t been concealed still appears to be a problem.

In November, the FDA warned two Indian facilities operated by Lupin Ltd. for ignoring tests showing that pills made there didn’t meet quality standards. In 2015 and 2016, the FDA found 134 instances when drugs or active ingredient­s failed initial testing but the company chose to override the results. Lupin called the failed tests “laboratory error” even when evidence suggested that wasn’t the case, according to the FDA.

Lupin has 11 facilities that manufactur­e generics globally, according to its website. Its products include widely prescribed antibiotic­s, oral contracept­ives and cardiovasc­ular and depression drugs. According to a review of generic versions of depression drug Cymbalta by Bloomberg News last year, Lupin’s was the subject of the most complaints to the FDA.

Lupin didn’t respond to a request for comment. — WPBloomber­g

 ??  ?? A pedestrian passes the research and developmen­t centre for Ranbaxy Laboratori­es in Gurgaon, India, on Jan 17, 2007.
A pedestrian passes the research and developmen­t centre for Ranbaxy Laboratori­es in Gurgaon, India, on Jan 17, 2007.

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