Business Standard

Demand for cough, cold medicines weak

- SOHINI DAS Mumbai, 2 December

Demand in India for cough and cold medicines remained weak even as the US witnessed one of the worst beginnings to the season the past decade.

Analysts at Nuvama Research said key findings show five times more illness versus the average of the last five years, eight times more hospital visits, and 3.5 times more deaths this season in the US.

Indian companies stand to gain as a result of a strong flu season as they enjoy a one-third share of the total prescripti­on market in Oseltamivi­r (flu medicine) suspension market.

Oseltamivi­r is the first-line treatment for Influenza A and B. This has been a generic drug since December 2016 (capsules) and December 2017 (suspension) with multiple players.

Analysts say the number of flu patients and resultant prescripti­ons has risen in the past two weeks. “Oseltamivi­r has multiple players, but Indian companies have a lion’s share — in suspension (one-third of the total prescripti­ons),” said Nuvama Research. Natco has a market share of about 36 per cent, while Ajanta Pharma has 25 per cent, Zydus around 16 per cent and Lupin enjoys a 13 per cent market share, the analysts noted. In capsules, Hetero has an 18 per cent share, while Alembic has 17 per cent, Lupin (15 per cent) and Strides enjoys 13 per cent share.

The combined market size (suspension and capsules) is around $300-350 million. “While the flu season can be unpredicta­ble and peak at different times – in 2017–18 in January after a low-key start, the sixweek data of 2022–23 season is not only indicating the highest number of influenza-like-illness, but also a pickup in intensity week-over-week,” the brokerage noted.

On the other hand, cold and flu medication sales in the domestic market remain muted. Data from market research firm AWACS shows that there has been a 2.4 per cent dip in volume sales of these drugs in October over the previous month.

Sheetal Sapale, president (marketing), AWACS said demand for flu medication­s are seasonal, and there are no major changes so far this season. Meanwhile, doctors have recommende­d taking the flu vaccine this season since it not only protects against severe forms of influenza but also severe Covid-19 disease.

Vaccine makers, however, said there was hardly any demand for flu vaccines this year in India. “The demand is weak,” said a senior executive of a drug firm that makes the vaccine. A study on more than 30,000 health care workers in Qatar found that those who got a flu jab were nearly 90 per cent less likely to develop severe Covid-19 over the next few months compared to those who had not been vaccinated against flu.

This study was conducted before the rollout of the Covid-19 vaccines, sometime in late 2020, said an article published in Nature in May this year. In fact, researcher­s found that those who had taken a flu shot for that season were 30 per cent less likely to test positive for Sars-cov-2. The study was posted on the medrxiv preprint server in May.

Doctors in India agree on the benefits of the flu shot. Monalisa Sahu, consultant, infectious diseases, Yashoda Hospitals, Hyderabad, said, “According to studies, in those seasons when the majority of circulatin­g flu viruses are well-matched with those used for making flu vaccines, the vaccine lowers the chance of getting flu by between 40 per cent and 60 per cent among the population.”

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