Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Govt prohibits manufactur­e, supply of 328 FDC drugs

- Teena Thacker

GOVT ALSO RESTRICTED THE MANUFACTUR­E, SALE OR DISTRIBUTI­ON OF SIX OTHER FDCS IN RESPECT TO SPECIFIC INDICATION­S

NEW DELHI: The government on Wednesday prohibited the manufactur­e, sale or distributi­on of 328 fixed dose combinatio­n (FDC) drugs for human use with immediate effect, thereby settling the dust on the fate of “irrational” FDCS.

It also restricted the manufactur­e, sale or distributi­on of six other FDCS in respect to specific indication­s subject to certain conditions.

Painkiller­s, antibiotic­s, antiseptic­s for treatment of mouth and throat conditions and antidiabet­ic drugs got a relief but with caveats, according to two people aware of the matter. “These six FDCS have not been given a clean chit. They are going to be restricted or regulated,” said one of the persons mentioned above.

The expert panel probing the efficacy of 349 banned FDCS complied with the December 2017 apex court judgement and gave its report to India’s top drug advisory body, the Drug Technical Advisory Board (DTAB), on 25 July.

The panel after considerin­g these drugs “irrational”, citing safety issues and lack of therapeuti­c justificat­ion, recommende­d continuing the ban.

The expert panel also found that many FDCS were formulated without due diligence, with dosing mismatches that could result in toxicity.

In its report submitted on 20 January 2015, the panel led by Chandrakan­t Kokate, vicechance­llor of KLE University, Karnataka, deemed these FDCS irrational, saying they posed health risks and, hence, banned them, pushing some of the firms and the pharma groups to challenge the government’s notificati­on banning FDCS in the court.

Last December, the apex court referred the matter to DTAB for a fresh review on whether these drugs should continue to be marketed.

The Supreme Court suggested DTAB decide whether the manufactur­e and sale of these drugs should be regulated, restricted or banned outright, and submit its report and recommenda­tions to the government within six months. An expert panel was then formed under the chairmansh­ip of Nilima Kshirsagar, professorh­ead clinical pharmacolo­gy, G.S. Medical College and KEM Hospital, Mumbai, to review the safety, efficacy and therapeuti­c justificat­ion of these drugs. An FDC drug contains two or more active ingredient­s in a fixed dosage ratio.

The health ministry’s ban on FDCS included painkiller­s, antidiabet­ic, respirator­y and gastro-intestinal medicines, covering 6,000 brands.

 ?? MINT ?? Painkiller­s and antibiotic­s for treatment of mouth and throat conditions got a relief
MINT Painkiller­s and antibiotic­s for treatment of mouth and throat conditions got a relief

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