Business Standard

India may soon run short of antibiotic­s and diabetes drugs

- SOHINI DAS More on business-standard.com

India may face a shortage of antibiotic­s, vitamins, and even diabetes medicines if no alternativ­e source of raw material for these drugs is found soon. Indian pharmaceut­ical companies are heavily dependent on China to source fermentati­on-based active pharmaceut­ical ingredient­s (APIS) and intermedia­tes to manufactur­e these medicines, but the coronaviru­s outbreak there has disrupted the supply.

The prices of certain APIS have already jumped 25-30 per cent in the domestic market, according to industry sources. Plants manufactur­ing these APIS in China are shut in view of lockdown there. Indian formulatio­n units (medicine manufactur­ers) typically have a buffer stock of around two months, and some medicines from the stock are already in circulatio­n.

“My supplier in Hebei province in China which does not even share a border with Hubei province, where Wuhan is in a lockdown, informed that people are confined to their homes and factories are shut until further notice. I am not receiving regular supplies of chemicals and intermedia­tes from China,” said an API manufactur­er in India. He apprehende­d a shortage of antibiotic­s, vitamins and diabetes drugs if the supply disruption continued. For metformin, the most-common prescribed diabetes medicine in India, the entire supply of fermentati­on APIS comes from China.

Industry representa­tives met senior officials of the department of pharmaceut­icals on Monday and apprised them of the current inventory of raw materials. They requested the government to ease pollution norms to allow indigenous units to alter

their product portfolio and produce fermentati­on APIS in the country.

But a senior industry executive, who was a part of the meeting, doubted if Indian API units could switch their products so swiftly.

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