Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Remdesivir shortage hits Delhi as requiremen­t soars

- Anonna Dutt

THE MEDICINE IS SOLD FOR INSTITUTIO­NAL PURPOSE TO HOSPITALS TREATING CORONAVIRU­S PATIENTS DIRECTLY

NEW DELHI: There is a shortage of the experiment­al antiviral drug Remdesivir across India, but especially in Delhi, with many scrambling to source it from other cities or buying it at exorbitant prices.

Doctors blame increased demand and limited supply of the medicine for its shortage since the Union health ministry on June 13 allowed its emergency use for treating Covid-19 patients with moderate symptoms. An increase in cases around the country has seen more doctors prescribin­g the drug , but supply hasn’t increased proportion­ately. Patients prescribed the drug are typically given six doses (each is an injection).

The Drug Controller General of India (DGCI) on June 1 allowed Gilead Sciences, which holds the patent for Remdesivir, to start importing the medicine. Three Indian manufactur­ers — Hetero, Cipla, and Mylan— have since been allowed to manufactur­e the drug in India. Several other companies, including Jubilant and Zydus are awaiting approvals from the regulator. All of them have signed agreements with patent holder Gilead.

The medicine was earlier available at only a few hospitals across the country as part of the World Health Organisati­on’s solidarity trial to study the efficacy of various therapies for Covid-19.

Currently, the generic (off patent) drug manufactur­ed by Hetero is available in Delhi. The company has priced the product at ₹5,400 a vial. Media reports say it has thus far manufactur­ed and supplied 20,000 vials.

“The generics manufactur­ed by two other companies are likely to enter the market over the next couple of days and resolve the shortages. For now, we have been asked to monitor the situation. There is a Bangladesh­i variant of the drug available in India that is being sold to desperate patients,” said an official from Delhi’s drug control department, who asked not to be named.

Cipla is expected to launch its product before the end of the week. Several state government­s are also in line to buy the drug; some have already placed orders with Hetero.

After receiving several complaints of drug shortage, India’s drugs controller on Tuesday directed state authoritie­s to ensure there is no black marketing or over pricing of Remdesivir that it has allowed under emergency use authorisat­ion for severely ill patients of Covid-19. “The states have been directed to take strict action against the defaulters” said a senior official in the drugs controller­s office.

The medicine is unavailabl­e at pharmacies for personal use and is sold for institutio­nal use to hospitals treating Covid-19 patients directly.

Abhay Shrivastav, a Delhi resident, said he has been looking for six vials of the Remdesivir injection prescribed to the 84-year-old mother of a family friend. “Our patient is admitted to one of the biggest hospitals in the city. The doctor there prescribed the medicine and said that there was a shortage in the hospital and the family would have to arrange for it. If the drug is not supposed to be sold in the pharmacies, where can we get it from?” Shrivastav has been assured the medicine for ₹65,000 a vial after he posted a message on social media . His brother has been able to find four vials of the medicine in Mumbai and is sending them via a courier.

Both private and government hospitals in Delhi have reported depleting stock of the medicine. “There is a shortage of Remdesivir to some extent since the drug is now approved as a first-line treatment for moderate to severe [patients]... and demand has increased. We are currently managing through the inter-unit transfer of available stocks within the hospitals based on requiremen­ts,” said Fortis Healthcare in a statement.

Max Hospital, Saket, one of the first private hospitals in Delhi to start treating Covid-19 patients, also reported a shortage of the drug over the last three days.

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