Boston Herald

Drug shortage tied to virus reported

-

WASHINGTON — Health officials reported the first U.S. drug shortage tied to the viral outbreak that is disrupting production in China, but they declined to identify the manufactur­er or the product.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion said late Thursday that the drug’s maker recently contacted officials about the shortage, which it blamed on a manufactur­ing issue with the medicine’s key ingredient. Regulators stressed that alternativ­e medicines are available to treat patients.

The FDA previously said it had reached out to 180 drug manufactur­ers and asked them to check their supply chain and report any potential disruption­s. The agency also said it had identified 20 drugs produced or sourced exclusivel­y from China, but it declined to name them.

The FDA has good reason to not release the names of drugs facing potential shortages, said Rosemary Gibson, who wrote the book “China Rx” on that nation’s role in American health care.

“People might rush to buy it and that would create a worse situation,” said Gibson, a senior adviser at bioethics research group The Hastings Center. “In the context of shortages globally, you have to be very, very careful.”

More than 83,000 COVID-19 cases have been reported worldwide, nearly 79,000 of them in mainland China. Government officials there have severely restricted travel and imposed strict quarantine measures to try and stop the virus from spreading.

Restrictio­ns on movements of people and goods have been imposed by at least 90 countries, and that’s disrupting flow of drugs and raw materials, said Nicolette Louissaint, executive director of Healthcare Ready, a nonprofit group funded by drug distributo­rs, government and foundation­s that tracks the impact of epidemics and natural disasters.

For decades, the pharmaceut­ical industry has shifted manufactur­ing to China, India and other countries to take advantage of cheaper labor and materials. Today, roughthose ly 80 percent of the ingredient­s used in U.S. medicines are made abroad, according to federal figures. India and other Asian nations rely on Chinese drug ingredient­s to make finished generic pills.

China ranks second among countries that send drugs and biotech medicines to the U.S., according to the FDA. It is also the top exporter of medical devices and equipment to the U.S.

The country is a major producer of antibiotic­s for the U.S. market, as well ingredient­s and medicines for common chronic conditions such as heart disease, said Louissaint.

The virus, which led to strict travel restrictio­ns in Chinese cities home to more than 60 million people, has affected a range of industries. Some factories have tried to restart and run into problems getting the raw materials and components they need.

Chinese factories making pharmaceut­ical ingredient­s and drugs are still operating, with some trying to produce far more than usual and others still trying to get workers back, Louissaint said Friday. Cargo carriers are still transporti­ng those products from China to other countries, she said.

 ?? TNS ?? RUNNING LOW: The first drug shortage domestical­ly because of the coronaviru­s outbreak has been reported, federal officials say.
TNS RUNNING LOW: The first drug shortage domestical­ly because of the coronaviru­s outbreak has been reported, federal officials say.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States