The Sunday Guardian

‘US not after Indian drug makers’

Some Indian officials say the US is disproport­ionately targeting Indian companies for enforcemen­t actions.

- TONI CLARKE WASHINGTON REUTERS

The head of the US Food and Drug Administra­tion said on Friday it was not unduly targeting drug companies in India, which supplies a large portion of drugs used in the US, as the agency cracks down on substandar­d medication from abroad. In recent months, the FDA banned drugs and drug ingredient­s from two Indian companies, Ranbaxy Laboratori­es Ltd and Wockhardt Ltd, citing quality concerns. Some Indian officials say the US is disproport­ionately targeting Indian companies for enforcemen­t actions. FDA Commission­er Margaret Hamburg, who recently returned from a 10-day of- ficial visit to India, rejected those charges, saying that her agency was simply “undertakin­g our required regulatory activities” needed to protect public health in the United States. India supplies about 40% of the generic and over-thecounter drugs consumed in the United States, making it the second-largest supplier after Canada. Yet quality control problems have long plagued India’s drug industry, largely due to a weak regulatory system. In 2012, a report by India’s parliament alleged collusion between pharmaceut­ical firms and officials at the country’s Central Drugs Standard Control Organizati­on, which oversees the licensing, marketing and trials of new drugs. It described an agency that was both chronicall­y understaff­ed and underquali­fied. The country is trying to improve but the task facing both local and overseas inspectors is difficult. The FDA has 12 members of staff in India, while about 500 Indian companies are registered to export drugs to the US. The FDA staff is tasked with fostering communicat­ion with their Indian counterpar­ts and can inspect facilities.

Dr. Amir Attaran, a professor of law and medicine at the University of Ottawa, noted that “even if you put a huge number of FDA staff in New Delhi, they have no legal power, no ability to do surprise inspection­s, no ability to issue subpoenas or take other measures to force a drugmaker to open its books.” “They are foreign agents in a foreign land,” he said. During Hamburg’s visit, the FDA and India’s Ministry of Health and Family Welfare signed a statement of intent to cooperate to prevent the distributi­on of unsafe drugs. The statement is not binding and has no enforcemen­t power behind it. Among other things, the FDA agreed to inform India’s regulatory authoritie­s before inspection­s so that local inspectors can observe. The ink on the statement was barely dry when the drug controller general of India, G.N. Singh, said in an interview that India would follow its own quality standards and that “the FDA may regulate its country, but it can’t regulate India on how India has to behave or how to deliver.” Singh said his agency regularly inspects manufactur­ing facilities in India and that it plans to raise the number of inspectors to 5,000 in three to five years, from about 1,500. “We don’t recognize and are not bound by what the US is doing and is inspecting,” he added. Some observers are skeptical of India’s commitment to improving quality standards. Last year, Ranbaxy pleaded guilty to felony US charges of shoddy manufactur­ing practices and data falsificat­ion and agreed to pay $500 million in civil and criminal fines. Dinesh Thakur, a former Ranbaxy executive who blew the whistle on the company nearly a decade ago, said no one in the Indian government has contacted him about the matter.

“Clearly this is not a priority for the Indian government at the moment,” he said. The FDA may be able to ban products from individual facilities but its ability to impose widespread restrictio­ns on India’s drugs is limited, since the US relies on them so heavily. “The dirty little secret in all this is that we can’t do without Indian products,” said Roger Bate, an economist at the American Enterprise Institute who will moderate a congressio­nal briefing on global substandar­d and counterfei­t medicines on Wednesday. “We have to negotiate and pressure because we can’t boycott.”

A group of critics, including Bate, Attaran and Dr Harry Lever, a cardiologi­st at the Cleveland Clinic, plans to attend the briefing and hopes to put pressure on the White House to take up the issue of drug quality with the Indian government. Lever plans to discuss problems he is increasing­ly encounteri­ng with inferiorqu­ality medicines. “The Indian government needs to feel some pain on this,” Bate said. Hamburg repeated a call she made while in India for Indian regulators to step up their participat­ion in discussion­s about global collaborat­ion on drug production. “India needs to be a full participan­t at the table,” she said.

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