London: Substandard medicines more prevalent than fakes in world’s most malaria-burdened country
A
rigorous analysis of more than 3,000 antimalarials purchased in Enugu,
Nigeria found 9.3% to be of poor quality, according to new research
published in PLOS ONE. Researchers found 1.2% of the samples
to be falsified and 1.3% to be degraded, but raised bigger concerns
about 6.8% being of substandard manufacture, leaving patients at risk of
not receiving the correct treatment dose and potentially contributing
to the development of resistance to the main drug used to treat malaria.
The drug quality team of the Artemisinin-based Combination Therapy (ACT) Consortium
at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine analysed 3,024
antimalarials containing artemisinin (the component that makes malaria
treatment effective) from Enugu Metropolis, South East Nigeria, which
has a population of 3.3 million. Nigeria is the single most heavily
malaria-burdened country in the world, with 48 million malaria cases and
180,000 deaths per year.
Lead author Dr Harparkash Kaur,
Lecturer of Pharmacology at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical
Medicine, said: “Although these results raise concerns, they are
reassuring in comparison with previous reports that found that more than
35% of antimalarials in sub-Saharan Africa failed chemical content
analysis – in other words, were poor quality. This may be because those
reports predominantly used a“convenience” approach to select samples for
analysis, which may not be representative of the places where patients
buy their medicines.”
The team purchased medicines from 421
outlets in Enugu including pharmacies, patent medicine vendors, and
public health facilities. In addition to “convenience” sampling, which
lacks systematic guidance on which outlets to sample from, samples were
also bought from a representative sample of outlets. Two approaches were
used in the representative sampling: a covert approach, using “mystery
clients” in which researchers pretended to be patients with malaria, or
their relatives, asking to buy medicines; and an “overt” approach, where
researchers told vendors openly that they were going to analyse the
quality of their malaria medicines.
Each sample was analysed in three
independent laboratories in the UK and USA and classified as acceptable
quality, falsified (fake drugs which do not contain the stated active
pharmaceutical ingredient or API), substandard (which contain inadequate
amounts of the active ingredients), or degraded (decomposition of the
API by poor storage conditions, such as heat and humidity).
All three sampling methods detected
falsified drugs, but the prevalence was higher in samples purchased
using the convenience approach.
Falsified samples contained chemicals
other than the stated API, such as chlorzoxazone (a muscle relaxant),
ciprofloxacin (an antibiotic) or acetaminophen (a commonly used
painkiller).
The team also identified
artemisinin-based monotherapy tablets, which are no longer recommended
by the World Health Organization because they do not include the partner
compound that makes it an effective artemisinin-based combination
therapy. Some of these monotherapies were also falsified.
Substandard or degraded drugs were more prevalent than falsified ones in Enugu. Poor
quality drugs were frequently found in patent medicine vendors – also
known as drug shops, which are the main source of treatment for most
patients – rather than in pharmacies.
Study co-author Prof Obinna Onwujekwe
from the University of Nigeria added: “The results show that the health
system actors should be eternally vigilant in Nigeria and in other
countries to ensure that sub-standard drugs do not impede or erode gains
made in malaria treatment. Drug regulatory authorities and their
partners should intensify drug quality monitoring activities with
appropriate sanctions for defaulters.”
The ACT Consortium’s large drug quality
programme, which has analysed over 10,000 samples from six malaria
endemic countries over five years, has recently published results from
Tanzania and Cambodia, where substandard medicines were of similar
concern but where no falsified medicines were found. Results from
Equatorial Guinea, Ghana and Rwanda will be published in the next few
months.
- See more at:
http://www.lshtm.ac.uk/newsevents/news/2015/one_in_10_malaria_drugs_poor_quality_in_nigeria.html#sthash.dgwwjXVt.dpuf