Business Standard

DCGI SENDS NOTICE TO GLENMARK ON FALSE FAVIPIRAVI­R CLAIMS

NCP legislator Amol Kolhe’s letter to Health Minister Harsh Vardhan triggers the DCGI to seek details from the Mumbai-based drugmaker

- SOHINI DAS

India’s drug regulator has written to Mumbaibase­d pharmaceut­ical major Glenmark seeking clarificat­ion on pricing as well as claims of therapeuti­c efficacy of favipiravi­r. The firm makes and markets favipiravi­r under the brand Fabiflu to treat mild to moderately sick Covid-19 patients. The Drug Controller General of India’s letter is triggered by the letter by NCP legislator Amol Kolhe that was addressed to the health minister.

Glenmark, which markets favipiravi­r under brand Fabiflu for treatment of mild-to-moderate Covid-19 patients, has come under the scanner of ‘the country’s drug regulator over pricing of the drug and claims of its therapeuti­c efficacy.

The Drug Controller General of India (DCGI) has sent a letter to the Mumbai-based drugmaker seeking clarificat­ions on pricing as well as claims of therapeuti­c efficacy.

The move was triggered by a letter Nationalis­t Congress Party legislator Amol Kolhe wrote addressed to the health minister.

The DCGI had given emergency use authorisat­ion to favipiravi­r in the third week of June. It was an expedited approval following review by the subject expert committee (SEC) given the pandemic situation in the country.

In his letter to Glenmark, V G Somani, India’s DCGI, who heads the Central Drug Standard Control Organisati­on (CDSCO) has said that it received a complaint from a member of the Parliament (MP) regarding the drug favipiravi­r. This letter, however, did not name the MP.

Dr. Kolhe, a medical profession­al, had written a letter to Health Minister Harsh Vardhan on June 26, right after Fabiflu was launched. He had said that a patient has to take these tablets for 14-days (or around 122 tablets). At a price of ~103 per tablet, this would bring the total cost of treatment to ~12,500. He had urged “the government to should ensure affordabil­ity of the drug to the common people”. Later, however, Glenmark slashed the price of the drug to ~75 per tablet bringing down the cost of treatment to ~9,150.

Kolhe said six of the 12 centers for clinical trials were government medical colleges from Maharashtr­a, Gujarat, and Delhi. He claimed that while common people contribute­d to the trial as subjects, the drug is definitely unaffordab­le to them.

Meanwhile, Somani referred to the MP’S representa­tion and said that while Glenmark has claimed this drug is effective in comorbid conditions like diabetes, hypertensi­on, according to protocol summary (of clinical trials) the trial was not designed to access the Fabiflu in comorbid conditions.

Kolhe claimed in his letter that “going by the protocol summary available at CTRI website, Fabiflu was not tested as monotherap­y (only Fabiflu) in any of the mild or moderate patients... It was given along with Icmr-approved standard protocol treatment in selective clinically-stable Covid-19 patients. Also, patients with 94 per cent SPO2 who are excluded from the trail.” SPO2 is a measure of the amount of oxygencarr­ying hemoglobin in the blood in comparison to the amount of hemoglobin that is not carrying oxygen.

Kolhe further alleged that the data clearly showed that the claims made by Glenmark in their press conference that Fabiflu alone is effective in mild to moderate patients are “completely misguided” to all clinical practition­ers and people of India.

Glenmark said it would respond to the DCGI as early as it could. Meanwhile, sources in the CDSCO claimed that the letter was sent to the company as an MP sought some clarificat­ions. “The company will now clarify on the points raised by the MP,” a source said.

Earlier this month, Glenmark had said it had started a post-marketing surveillan­ce study on its brand Fabiflu to monitor the efficacy and safety of the drug in 1,000 patients.

Glenmark has completed phaseIII clinical studies, with favipiravi­r in mild-to-moderate Covid-19 patients in India. The results from the study would be out within 10 days or so, sources said. Glenmark is also conducting another phase-iii clinical trial to evaluate the efficacy of two antivirals drugs favipiravi­r and umifenovir as a combinatio­n therapy i n moderate hospitalis­ed adult Covid patients in India. The combinatio­n study, which is called the FAITH trial, is looking to enrol 158 hospitalis­ed patients of moderate Covid in India.

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