Millennium Post

Notificati­on banning 344 FDCS quashed by High Court

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: In a relief to pharma companies, the Delhi High Court on Thursday quashed the Centre’s notificati­ons to ban 344 fixed dose combinatio­n (FDC) popular medicines such as Corex, Saridon, Benadryl, D’cold Total and Vicks Action 500.

Justice R S Endlaw, allowing the 454 pleas filed by the pharma companies, quashed the government notificati­ons issued on March 10, holding they was issued without following the procedure statutoril­y prescribed.

It also said that central government, though acting in public interest, seems to have banned the FDC drugs in a “haphazard manner”.

“All 344 notificati­ons dated March, 10 2016 purportedl­y in exercise of power under section 26A of the Drugs Act are found to have been issued without following the procedure statutoril­y prescribed to be followed prior to issuance thereof and resultantl­y it is held that the notificati­ons are not based on satisfacti­on of the Central Government prescribed to be on the advice of and in consultati­on with the DTAB (Drug Testing Advisory Board) and DCC (Drug Consultati­ve Committee).

“Resultantl­y the said notificati­ons are quashed,” said the court.

Companies like Pfizer, Glenmark, Procter and Gam- ble, Reckitt Benckiser, Cipla and others had moved the court against the government decision, and the court had granted a stay on the notificati­on.

The government had told the court that FDC medicines sold by pharma majors “endanger patient safety”.

FDCS are combinatio­n of two or more drugs in a single pill and are widely used to improve patient compliance as it is easier to get someone to take one drug than several.

The government had banned the drugs on the ground that they involve risk to humans and hence needed to be withdrawn immediatel­y and contended that safer alternativ­es were available.

The pharma companies had argued that the ban order was passed without considerin­g clinical data and had termed the government’s claim as absurd. The court in its judgement also said: “I have already held above that this Court in exercise of power of judicial review cannot adjudicate whether these FDCS are risky to the consumers or lack therapeuti­c value or therapeuti­c justificat­ion.”

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REPRESENTA­TIVE IMAGE

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