Khaleej Times

Plan to import ‘game-changing’ Hepatitis-C drug

- AFP

islamabad — Pakistan has authorised the import of an expensive Hepatitis-C drug from the United States to improve treatment for the estimated eight million people carrying the blood infection, officials said on Monday.

Hailed by experts as a gamechange­r, Sovaldi, which has been on the market since 2013, costs around $1,000 per pill in the US or $84,000 for a single course of treatment, according to a US Senate report released in December.

The drug is now being sold nationally in a Pakistani pharmacy chain for around $314 per 28 tablets, while the government is urging local manufactur­ers to produce generic copies on an urgent basis.

“It is estimated that some eight million people are suffering from Hepatitis-C in Pakistan and each year about 80,000 people will die,” a senior health ministry official said.

“These deaths are caused by advanced liver disease spanning over a period of 20-30 years,” he added.

“The government had to act urgently and even before the formal registrati­on of the drug in the country, it gave special permission to import Sovaldi tablets from the US.”

Another official at the drug registrati­on authority said the government was exploring the option of cheaper alternativ­es.

“We are encouragin­g local manufactur­ers to produce generic drugs on a priority basis which are safe, efficaciou­s and affordable,” the official said. Last October Pakistan’s drug authority received 61 applicatio­ns from pharmaceut­ical firms to produce Sofosbuvir tablets, the generic name of the drug, of which 14 manufactur­ers were finally approved.

Gilead Sciences, which makes Sovaldi, has been criticised in the US for the drug’s cost. The lofty price, set by Gilead, placed Sovaldi and its follow-up drug Harvoni out of reach of many consumers, the US Senate report said.

Hepatitis-C is a blood infection transmitte­d via contaminat­ed needles, sexual intercours­e, and from pregnant mothers to their unborn children. —

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