Deccan Chronicle

Black fungus rose due to lack of meds: Docs

State hosp has no drug, pvt sector gets it from stockists

- KANIZA GARARI | DC

Shortage of medicines to treat black fungus affliction is a major challenge. Different grades of amphoteric­in drugs are not available in the city.

Ear, nose and throat doctors in private hospitals and pharmacist­s say they do not understand why such a shortage.

Amphoteric­in B deoxychola­te is a convention­al drug that has side-effects affecting kidney but doctors say they can get a kidney specialist to manage the patient and stop the fungus invasion if the medicine is available.

“This medicine is cheap but not available in Telangana. It costs about `400,” a doctor said.

Private hospital management­s have reached out to stockists in Chennai and Bangalore for different grades of amphoteric­in. ENT specialist­s have also contacted their colleagues in Mumbai and Delhi. The drug is available in these cities.

An ENT specialist said, “There is need for aggressive interventi­on by the state government. We are having patients with invasion in the eyes. Surgical removal of fungus is possible by removing the eyeball and cleaning the region from nose to eyes. But, in order to not allow the fungus to regrow, we need amphoteric­in.”

“The convention­al drug will also do, and we need to urgently save the affected patients from this lifethreat­ening invasion.”

At present, doctors are also using antibiotic­s and alternativ­e drugs but they say this is not helping.

Dr Srinivas Kishore, ENT surgeon at Asian institute of gastroente­rology says, “We have 40 patients in the hospital and require 1,000 vials. Till we get the medicine we are managing somehow, but the drug is required for complete recovery.”

Doctors are not able to understand why this shortage. Production was always less, though. Since the last one week, there has been constant hue and cry over black fungus. Production should have been scaled up and the drug made available in a matter of a few days, say senior ENT doctors.

The raw materials for different grades of amphoteric­in are available in the market. A senior pharmacist says, “In my 42 years of practice, there has never been such a steady shortage of medicines.

Where have all the stocks gone? There are no old stocks in the market, they say, but this cannot be the case.”

Each stockist would have at least 10,000 vials in different centres for antifungal treatment.

The grade of liposomal amphoteric­in B is an advanced version and it is costly. The price for this medicine ranges from `2,000 to `3,000 for 50 mg. This has minimal sideeffect­s on kidney compared to convention­al amphoteric­in. The production of this particular grade was always limited.

Each patient in the present situation requires 100 vials for cure. ENT specialist­s urge the government to intervene and make the drug available as soon as possible for all hospitals.

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