Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Regulator set to make stress tests mandatory for all drugs in India

- Teena Thacker teena.t@livemint.com

NEWDELHI: India’s drug regulator is set to propose amendments to the existing Drugs and Cosmetics Rules, 1945, to make “stability testing” mandatory for all drugs sold in the country before they are deemed suitable for use by patients. “Stability testing will be made compulsory for all drugs. An advisory letter has already been sent to the state drug controller sand a notificati­on amending the rules is likely to come soon,” said GN Singh, drug controller general of India (DCGI).

Once the rules take effect, ph arm a firms will have to subject their products to quality tests to make sure that drugs do not lose their potency and the expiry dates printed on the packaging are based on the test results.

“We will also get random checks done from the samples picked up from the market and if any discrepanc­ies are found, the companies will have to shell out fines and may lose their licence,” added Singh.

Mandated globally, stability testing is the process of subjecting drugs to different tests in varying degrees of temperatur­e and sunlight. In India, such tests are mandatory only for patented and proprietar­y drugs.

The Central Drugs Standards Control Organisati­on (CDSCO) has proposed making stability tests compulsory for all drugs, including active pharmaceut­ical ingredient­s( AP Is ), the raw materials used in a drug that give it a therapeuti­c effect.

The pharmaceut­ical industry is unhappy about the proposal to widen the ambit of the stability tests.

“As of now the stability tests are carried out on formulatio­ns. If they widen the ambit and include all drugs, this will mean adding APIs and capsules too. It takes at least 6-9 months to carry out stability tests. There will be practical problems to get this done and we have been requesting the CDSCO to not include all the drugs into it ,” a ph arm a lobby group representa­tive said on condition of anonymity.

CDSCO officials say they are unlikely to yield.

 ?? MINT/FILE ?? Soon, the expiry dates printed on the packaging are likely to be based on the test results
MINT/FILE Soon, the expiry dates printed on the packaging are likely to be based on the test results

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