Banned drugs with carcinogenic properties are selling in India

They are being prescribed to children left right and center because of poor communication systems between CDSO and States and States and Doctors. LocalCircles should enable a circle for CDSO where they can communicate directly with consumers and Doctors. Read Ashas case to understand how people get on the wrong path because of lack of information

In 2019, Asha’s toddler son had a bout of illness. The three-year old would frequently vomit while at the day-care facility he attended, and refuse to eat lunch. Asha, who works at a medical-diagnostic chain in Mumbai, approached her trusted paediatrician. His investigations revealed that the child had gastroesophageal reflux disease—a condition in which stomach acid travels up the food pipe, causing pain and nausea.
The paediatrician prescribed a commonly used drug for this condition, a syrup of the acid-blocker ranitidine. The brand name was Rantac Syrup, and it is sold by JB Chemicals, one of India’s largest manufacturers of the drug. After a two-week course, Asha’s son seemed to get better. But the reflux kept coming back, and Asha says doctors freely prescribe Rantac Syrup whenever kids have nausea. Just last month, when her son, now five years old, had fever and nausea, he got the same prescription again.

Unknown to Asha, however, ranitidine sales are either suspended or tightly circumscribed in several countries today. The USA, the European Union and Australia prohibit sales of this popular drug because the ranitidine molecule can break down into a potent carcinogen called N-Nitroso-dimethylamine or NDMA. In Canada, manufacturers are required to test samples from their batches at multiple times during the drug’s shelf life, to make sure NDMA is below safe limits.
The suspension of ranitidine sales in multiple countries, which happened in 2020, is just one part of a much bigger crisis that has engulfed the global pharmaceutical industry. The crisis first crept up in June 2018, when the European drug regulator, the European Medicines Agency (EMA), learnt that batches of a drug used to treat high blood pressure, called valsartan, had dangerously high levels of NDMA. In the three years since, the European agency and regulators of several other countries, including the US Food and Drug Administration (US FDA), Health Canada and Australia’s Therapeutic Goods Administration, have discovered not just NDMA, but several other related compounds in a variety of drugs. These contaminated drugs include ranitidine, two tuberculosis drugs called rifampin and rifapentin, two diabetes drugs called metformin and pioglitazone, and several of the so-called sartan group of blood pressure drugs, including valsartan, losartan and irbesartan.

The findings were deeply troubling for consumers because NDMA and many of its related compounds—together called nitrosamines—are strong carcinogens among animals, and likely have the same effect in humans. And the discoveries of nitrosamines in so many drugs suggested that contamination could be widespread. This realisation has sent EMA, US FDA and other regulators scrambling to control nitrosamine levels in drugs. Actions so far have included recalling and suspending sales of contaminated batches, widespread testing of samples, and the introduction of sweeping new quality-control measures to prevent future contamination. All these actions have happened in full public view, with the regulators sharing their decisions continuously with patients, doctors and manufacturers.
Yet, many Indian users of the affected drugs, like Asha, never learnt about the nitrosamine problem. This is because, all through the global turmoil, the Indian drug regulator, the Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation (CDSCO), barely communicated with consumers, except to make occasional claims to media outlets that Indian drugs were untouched by the nitrosamine issue.
In fact, CDSCO doesn’t seem to have done much behind the scenes either. Since 2019, CDSCO head has only sent two short and rudimentary communiques to state drug regulators, asking them to inform pharma companies to “verify their products" and to “take appropriate measures to ensure patient safety". These communiques do not ask companies to recall or suspend sales of their products if nitrosamine levels are high, nor to conduct risk assessments.

It is also unclear if CDSCO independently tested Indian drug products for nitrosamines, instead of merely leaving it to manufacturers. In fact, the CDSCO’s four central drug-testing laboratories do not have the equipment required to do such tests. more  

View all 16 comments Below 16 comments
There are nearly more tham 100 typesof medicines banned some 6 years back;and allowed fore use for one and half years. Many years have passed but the ban has not yet been enforced due to pharma lobby's clout with the govt agencies. more  
Like in the rest of the world, including the so-called developed and educated "western" world, the Pharma industry apparently in India too has got a very strong lobby in the governmental platforms. more  
Medicines should not be bought from friendly neighborhood chemists who are routinely giving banned medicines for routine use,like psychotropic medicines/PPI ( ranitidine & its sisters and brothers.. If a doctor was to write Phenargan,because of safety,it gets replaced by expensive Allegra without informing The Doctor.. Everyone wants to show off one upmanship ,expensive medicines are more effective ? more  
The health department advisory is not reaching the public and awareness is developing. more  
Indian medicine company needs this type medicine manufacturing should be banned with Indian government rules it’s a self decision because the India beg medicine supply in world. more  
Post a Comment

Related Posts

    • Study the attached price rise and lower taxes

      How prices of essentials have risen in last 10 years. Middle class is badly hit because earnings have not grown in this proportion. Middle class needs to thrive in India so that th...

      By RN Chopra
      /
    • Vehicle Sales Declining

      2 Wheelers Sales Down By -19.96% YoY Total Vehicle Sales Down By -15.26% YoY Even Basic Motorcycle is Taxed at 28% in India People Need Relief From High Taxes on Ne...

      By Swati M
      /
    • GST on used cars will impact dealers/online platforms

      And in turn prices for consumers who buy from such platforms Let me clear some myths on GST on used cars. Example 1: You buy a car for 15 lacs. Use it for 2-3 years and s...

      By Sanjit Jha
      /
    • Clowns in Paradise

      Really pissed off. Time is ticking - already effectively, nearly 15% of the 3rd term is over (because you can't do anything in last few months leading up to elections). And the Government appears t...

      By Sudesh Rai
      /
    • Clueless parliamentarians of India

      Successful countries talk about their present. Struggling countries keep talking about their past. China talks about its dominance in the EV industry. China talks about trains that run ...

      By Ruchika L Maheshwari
      /
    • Why tourism sector is broken in India

      There is an easier hypothesis why holidays in India have become Ultra expensive. Most of the luxury hotels in India are not a source of livelihood for the people who run them. It is not ...

      By Satvik Singh
      /
    • Major squeeze in middle class

      Our savings rate is at 5 decade low. Our consumption of even essential FMCG goods has slowed down. Two key essentials of every kitchen - wheat and oil, hugely impacted by infl...

      By Radha Puri
      /
    • Rampant Milk Adulteration

      Over 21700 kilos of chemicals recovered from the factory of Ajay Agarwal of Agarwal Traders of Bulandshahr. 500 liters of milk can be prepared from 1 kg of chemical. One man in one city. In the e...

      By Ashima Gupta
      /
    • Electric Cars in India

      Our friends undertook a Bengaluru to Hyderabad journey in an all Electric car attempting to be at mercy of roadside EV Charging Stations. They left Bengaluru at 230 pm and reached Hyder...

      By Shikha Chhabra
      /
    • Lost Decade of India

      Basic problems India had in 2014:- - Corruption - Reservation - Pollution - Lack of jobs - Not growing fast enough to build genuine wealth Basic proble...

      By Rohit Garg
      /
    • Tourism in India

      I am a yoga expert who has spent considerable amount of time learning the same in India. Many of my friends are unsure about visiting India because of visa process and then having to figure out how...

      By Ashley Jones
      /
Share
Enter your email and mobile number and we will send you the instructions

Note - The email can sometime gets delivered to the spam folder, so the instruction will be send to your mobile as well

All My Circles
Invite to
(Maximum 500 email ids allowed.)