Business Standard

EU nod to shelve drugs tested by Indian firm

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Europe’s medicines regulator has recommende­d the suspension of more than 300 generic drug approvals and drug applicatio­ns due to “unreliable” tests conducted by Indian contract research firm Micro Therapeuti­c Research Labs.

The decision, announced by the European Medicines Agency (EMA) on its website, is the latest blow for India’s drug-testing industry, which has run into a series of problems with internatio­nal regulators in recent years.

Nobody at the Chennaibas­ed company was immediatel­y available to comment.

The EMA said European officials had been investigat­ing Micro Therapeuti­c’s compliance with good clinical practice after Austrian and Dutch authoritie­s raised concerns in February 2016.

“The inspection­s identified several concerns at the company’s sites regarding misreprese­ntation of study data and deficienci­es in documentat­ion and data handling,” the agency said. However, there is no evidence of harm or lack of effectiven­ess of the medicines, which include generic versions of many common prescripti­on pharmaceut­icals, including blood pressure tablets and painkiller­s.

The EMA’s recommenda­tion on the suspension of the medicines tested by Micro Therapeuti­c will now be sent to the European Commission for a legally binding decision valid throughout the European Union.

Drug tests carried out at Indian contract research organisati­ons (CROs) have been key in getting a huge array of generic medicines approved for sale around the world over many years.

In 2015, Europe banned around 700 medicines that had been approved based on clinical trial data provided by GVK Bioscience­s, then India’s largest CRO. Other smaller Indian CROs have also been found to have fallen short of required standards.

In the wake of such trial data scandals, many large drugmakers have been shifting more critical trials back to the United States and Europe over the last three years, according to consultant­s and industry executives.

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