[F.D.A.
investigators are blitzing Indian drug plants, financing the inspections with
some of the roughly $300 million in annual fees from generic drug makers
collected as part of a 2012 law requiring increased scrutiny of overseas
plants. The agency inspected 160 Indian drug plants last year, three times as
many as in 2009. The increased scrutiny has led to a flood of new penalties,
including half of the warning letters the agency issued last year to drug
makers.]
Ranbaxy, one of felony charges and paid a $500 million fine last year. Adnan Abidi/Reuters |
Dr. Margaret A. Hamburg, the commissioner of the United
States Food and Drug Administration, arrived in India this week to express her growing
unease with the safety of Indian medicines because of “recent lapses in quality at a handful of pharmaceutical
firms.”
F.D.A. investigators are blitzing Indian drug plants,
financing the inspections with some of the roughly $300 million in annual fees
from generic drug makers collected as part of a 2012 law requiring increased
scrutiny of overseas plants. The agency inspected 160 Indian drug plants last
year, three times as many as in 2009. The increased scrutiny has led to a flood
of new penalties, including half of the warning letters the agency issued last
year to drug makers.
Dr. Hamburg was met by
Indian officials and executives who, shocked by recent F.D.A. export bans of
generic versions of popular medicines — such as the acne drug Accutane, the
pain drug Neurontin and the antibiotic Cipro — that the F.D.A. determined were
adulterated suspect she is just protecting a domestic industry from cheaper
imports.
“There are some people who take a very sinister view of
the F.D.A. inspections,” Keshav
Desiraju , India ’s
health secretary until this week, said in a recent interview.
The F.D.A.'s increased enforcement has already cost Indian
companies dearly — Ranbaxy, one of India’s biggest drug manufacturers, pleaded
guilty to felony charges and paid a $500 million fine last year, the largest
ever levied against a generic company. And many worry that worse is in store.
“If I have to follow U.S. standards in inspecting facilities
supplying to the Indian market,” G. N. Singh, India ’s
top drug regulator, said in a recentinterview with an Indian newspaper, “we will
have to shut almost all of those.”
The unease culminated Tuesday when
a top executive at Ranbaxy — which has repeatedly been caught lying to the
F.D.A. and found to have conditions such as flies “too numerous to count” in
critical plant areas — pleaded with Dr. Hamburg at a private meeting with other
drug executives to allow his products into the United States so that the
company could more easily pay for fixes. She politely declined.
In one recent example, counterfeit medicines at a
pediatric hospital in Kashmir are now suspected of playing a role in hundreds of infant deaths there in recent years.
One widely used antibiotic was found to contain no active
ingredient after being randomly tested in a government lab. The test was kept secret for nearly a year while some 100,000
useless pills continued to be dispensed.
More tests of hospital medicines found dozens more that
were substandard, including a crucial intravenous antibiotic used in sick
infants.
“Some of the fake tablets were used by pregnant women in
the post-surgical prevention of infections,” said Dr. M. Ishaq Geer, senior
assistant professor of pharmacology at Kashmir University .
“That’s very serious.”
Investigations of the deaths are continuing, but
convictions of drug counterfeiters in India are extremely rare.
Satish Reddy, president of the Indian
Pharmaceutical Alliance, said Indian drug manufacturers are better than the
F.D.A. now contends. “More rigorous enforcement is needed, for sure, but this
impression that India is overrun with counterfeits is
unjustified,” Mr. Reddy said.
But Heather Bresch,
chief executive of Mylan, which has plants in the United States and India, said
regulatory scrutiny outside of the United States was long overdue. “If there
were no cops around, would everyone drive the speed limit?” Ms. Bresch asked.
“You get careless, start taking risks. Our government has enabled this.”
For Dr. Hamburg, the
trip is part of a long-running effort to create a global network of drug and
food regulators to help scrutinize the growing flood of products coming into
the United States, including 80 percent of the seafood consumed in the United
States, 50 percent of the fresh fruit, 20 percent of the vegetables and the
vast majority of drugs.
She has gone to conclaves of regulators from Europe and elsewhere to coordinate policing,
but Indian officials have so far not attended such meetings.
Many of India ’s
drug manufacturing facilities are of top quality. Cipla, one of the industry’s
giants, has 40 plants across the country that together can produce more than 21
billion tablets and capsules annually, and one of its plants in Goa appeared just as sterile, automated
and high tech on a recent tour as those in the United
States .
Cipla follows F.D.A. guidelines at every plant and on
every manufacturing line, and the company exports more than 55 percent of its
production, said Yusuf Hamied, the company chairman.
But Benjamin Mwesige, a pharmacist at the Uganda Cancer
Institute in Kampala, said in an interview in July that the institute had
stopped buying cancer drugs from India in 2011 because it had received
shipments of drugs that turned out to be counterfeit and inactive, with Cipla
labels that Mr. Mwesige believed were forged.
He became suspicious when doctors began seeing
chemotherapy patients whose cancer showed none of the expected responses to the
drugs — and who also had none of the usual side effects. The drugs that had
been prescribed were among the mainstays of cancer treatment — methotrexate,
docetaxel and vincristine. Laboratory tests confirmed that the drugs were
bogus, and Mr. Mwesige estimated that in 2011 about 20 percent of the drugs
that the institute bought were counterfeit.
Enforcement of regulations over all is very weak, analysts
say, and India ’s
government does a poor job policing many of its industries. Last month, the
United States Federal Aviation Administration downgraded India’s aviation safety ranking
because the country’s air safety regulator is understaffed, and a global safety
group found that many of India’s best-selling
small cars are unsafe.
This absence of oversight, however, is a central reason India ’s
pharmaceutical industry has been so profitable. Drug manufacturers estimate
that routine F.D.A. inspections add about 25 percent to overall costs. In the
wake of the 2012 law that requires the F.D.A. for the first time to equalize
oversight of domestic and foreign plants, India ’s
cost advantage could shrink significantly.
Some top manufacturers are already warning that they may
leave, tough medicine for an already slowing economy.
“I’m a great nationalist, an Indian first and last,” Dr.
Hamied said. “But companies like Cipla are looking to expand their businesses
abroad and not in India .”
American businesses and F.D.A. officials are just as
concerned about the quality of drugs coming out of China ,
but the F.D.A.'s efforts to increase inspections there have so far been
frustrated by the Chinese government.
“China is the source of some of the largest
counterfeit manufacturing operations that we find globally,” said John P.
Clark, Pfizer’s chief security officer, who added that Chinese authorities were
cooperative.
Using its new revenues, the F.D.A. tried to bolster its
staff in China in February 2012. But the Chinese
government has so far failed to provide the necessary visas despite an announced
agreement in December 2013 during a visit by Vice President Joseph R. Biden
Jr., said Erica Jefferson, an F.D.A. spokeswoman.
The United
States has become so dependent on Chinese
imports, however, that the F.D.A. may not be able to do much about the Chinese
refusal. The crucial ingredients for nearly all antibiotics, steroids and many
other lifesaving drugs are now made exclusively in China .
Denise Grady
contributed reporting from Kampala , Uganda ,
and Hari Kumar from Srinagar , Kashmir .
@ The New York Times
@ The New York Times