Los Angeles Times

How drug companies over-rely on China

- By Henry I. Miller and John J. Cohrssen

China has become the world’s largest producer and exporter of “active pharmaceut­ical ingredient­s,” the base components drug companies use to manufactur­e most of the medication­s we rely on. China’s dominance puts both the health of Americans and our national security at risk.

According to the findings of a new report from the U.S.-China Economic Security Review Commission, which was establishe­d by Congress in 2000, China’s pharmaceut­ical industry “is not effectivel­y regulated by the Chinese government” and has been responsibl­e for a number of drug safety scandals.

Our dependence on Chinese pharmaceut­ical products, the commission concluded, means “the American public, including its armed forces, are at risk of exposure to contaminat­ed and dangerous medicines.”

The risk comes not only from the possibilit­y of poorly overseen manufactur­ing, but also because of possible interrupti­ons in production or a trade war. “Should Beijing opt to use U.S. dependence on China as an economic weapon and cut supplies of critical drugs,” the report noted, “it would have a serious effect on the health of U.S. consumers.”

The Chinese government promotes and protects the nation’s pharmaceut­ical companies to the disadvanta­ge of foreign competitor­s, as it does in other sectors; yet because of our dependence on the drug components China produces, we have little leverage.

The situation is a prescripti­on for disaster, and U.S. consumers, as well as many government officials, are woefully ignorant of the situation. People often have no idea the medication­s they rely on are made from Chinese components, since manufactur­ers only have to say where a finished drug was produced.

If China were to block or slow supplies of ingredient­s needed for common, essential drugs, like those to treat hypertensi­on, stroke, cardiac disease, infections, diabetes and other serious conditions, morbidity and mortality would skyrocket worldwide. In effect, we could see a policyindu­ced pandemic.

Even in the absence of such actions by China, supplies of key drugs are sometimes uneven. As of Dec. 4, the FDA was reporting shortages of 116 different drugs, including key chemothera­py drugs and other medication­s used to treat serious disease. As a result of drug shortages, U.S. hospitals and medical personnel sometimes have had to resort to second- or thirdline medicines.

So what can we do to address the dangers?

First, Congress needs to take stock of the situation. We need to know exactly how dependent the United States is on Chinese pharmaceut­icals and precursors. We need to know what other sources are available, including domestical­ly, and how close those sources might come to meeting our needs.

We also need to understand exactly what the FDA can and can’t do to guarantee the safety of precursor imports from China. The FDA deploys some inspectors there, but there are far too few to monitor the large number of producers. Once Congress understand­s the situation, it should take steps to grant whatever new authority is necessary to the FDA and other agencies to better protect the quality and quantity of medicines necessary for the health of Americans. And it should without delay direct the FDA to increase the number of inspectors in China.

Another step Congress could take is requiring drug manufactur­ers to fully disclose to consumers where the active pharmaceut­ical ingredient­s used in a drug come from. It isn’t enough to disclose where the final drug was made.

Congress could also use its considerab­le power of the purse to protect Americans by requiring government health systems (including Medicare, Medicaid, the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs) to buy pharmaceut­icals only from domestic manufactur­ers or production facilities abroad that can be inspected and certified by the FDA.

In recent decades, we have seen increasing globalizat­ion of pharmaceut­ical production. This is a good thing, with the potential to ensure adequate supplies of vital medicines. But the whole system is compromise­d when it relies too heavily on a single, potentiall­y unreliable source of ingredient­s.

Henry I. Miller, a physician and molecular biologist, is a senior fellow at the Pacific Research Institute. He was founding director of the Food and Drug Administra­tion’s Office of Biotechnol­ogy. John J. Cohrssen is an attorney who has served as counsel for the House Energy and Commerce Committee.

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