The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Reliance on China for antibiotic­s targeted

- By Kiyohiko Yoneyama and Mayumi Honda

Domestic pharmaceut­ical companies will resume production of active pharmaceut­ical ingredient­s (APIs) for antibiotic­s for the first time in about 30 years. Constructi­on of a new facility is due to start this spring.

Japan currently relies on imports from China for APIs, which are essential to produce antibiotic­s. With the internatio­nal situation becoming increasing­ly unstable, the government has begun supporting domestic drugmakers to become self-sufficient. Antibiotic­s, which are also known as antibacter­ials, kill or inhibit bacterial growth, and are essential for surgery.

However, there are many issues to be addressed in order to sustain domestic production which tends to be expensive.

REACTIVATI­NG FACILITIES

An 11-meter-high fermentati­on tank at Meiji Seika Pharma Co.'s Gifu plant in the town of Kitagata, Gifu Prefecture, produced raw materials for the antibiotic penicillin G until 1994. At its peak, the plant produced more than 1,000 tons per year, five times the domestic demand.

The company aims to resume the raw materials' production in this tank after around 30 years and will begin constructi­on of a new facility to refine the raw materials in May.

The company kept a mold that will be the material for production of the raw materials. “I'm happy to hand over production know-how, such as temperatur­e control, and make use of the knowledge for the country before I retire,” said Koichiro Yamada, 58, who was previously involved in production.

Japan used to actively produce APIs for antibiotic­s and export them overseas. However, the transfer of technology to China, where labor costs were lower, began in the 1990s. Now, Japan relies on China for most of the APIs for penicillin and other drugs.

In December 2022, the government designated antibiotic­s as a specified critical product under the Economic Security Promotion Law, along with products such as semiconduc­tors and aircraft parts. The government assists with the production and stockpilin­g of such products.

The developmen­t of coronaviru­s vaccines highlighte­d the importance of technology necessary to cope with emergencie­s. The government plans to establish a system to supply antibiotic­s for the country by 2030.

DESTABILIZ­ED SUPPLY

Supplies of critical products, such as semiconduc­tors and natural gas, are being disrupted around the world against the backdrop of an increasing­ly tense internatio­nal situation, including the rift between the United States and China. After a 2010 collision between a Chinese fishing boat and a Japan Coast Guard patrol vessel off the Senkaku Islands, the Chinese government restricted exports of rare earth elements to Japan.

The government is concerned that the supply of antibiotic­s will also become unstable. “[If that happens,] operations and medical treatment become impossible and may result in the deaths of many patients,” said a senior official of the Health, Labor and Welfare Ministry.

In 2019, supplies of Cefazolin, an antibiotic different from penicillin, were disrupted due to stricter environmen­tal regulation­s in China that led to suspended factory operations.

At the time, Tokyo Bay Urayasu Ichikawa Medical Center in Chiba Prefecture soon ran out of its Cefazolin stock. Substitute drugs also ran out quickly, and the center was repeatedly forced to change drugs.

“Surgery would have become impossible without antibiotic­s. We were desperate not to stop performing surgeries,” said Rentaro Oda, then head of the hospital's infection response office.

The 2019 incident triggered the government to designate antibiotic­s as a specified critical product.

Securing a stable supply of antibiotic­s is a common problem worldwide.

Viewing the dependence of pharmaceut­ical products on China as a problem, the administra­tion of U.S. President Joe Biden compiled a list of 86 critical medicines, including antibiotic­s, in 2022. The administra­tion has said it plans to both produce APIs domestical­ly and procure them from its allies, including Japan.

In 2021, the European Union designated 34 fields, including APIs, as industrial sectors highly dependent on non-EU countries and difficult to be substitute­d, and urged member countries to respond to the issue.

Revenue is also an issue due to drug prices.

The Japanese government establishe­d a ¥55 billion fund in 2023 to support the constructi­on of facilities to manufactur­e APIs for antibiotic­s. Two groups, both led by Meiji Seika Pharma and Shionogi Pharma Co., a subsidiary of Shionogi & Co., have started making moves.

However, even if production is resumed, it may stop again if profits are not generated. Japanese companies withdrew from the market in the 1990s due to falling drug prices. In 1978, Cefazolin injections were priced at ¥2,960 per gram, but has dropped to less than 10% at ¥291 in 2023.

Domestical­ly produced drugs are said to cost several times higher than Chinese products due to high labor and utility costs.

“It's essential to build a system that allows domestic production to continue in preparatio­n for emergencie­s,” said Hideaki Hanaki, head of the Research Center for Infection Control at Kitasato University. “It is necessary for the government to take measures to enable drug manufactur­ers to earn a certain level of profits, such as raising drug prices for specific products and purchasing raw materials.”

Building a sustainabl­e system is essential to bring the domestic production of antibiotic­s back on track.

 ?? The Yomiuri Shimbun ?? The production of active pharmaceut­ical ingredient­s for antibiotic­s is planned to start in one of the largest fermentati­on tanks in the country at Meiji Seika Pharma Co.’s plant in Gifu Prefecture.
The Yomiuri Shimbun The production of active pharmaceut­ical ingredient­s for antibiotic­s is planned to start in one of the largest fermentati­on tanks in the country at Meiji Seika Pharma Co.’s plant in Gifu Prefecture.

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