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Growing threat of substandard, counterfeit medicines addressed by new USAID-USP agreement
With substandard and counterfeit versions of medicines intended to treat life-threatening diseases such as malaria, HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis posing a growing threat throughout the developing world, the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and the U.S. Pharmacopeial Convention (USP) will expand their joint efforts to combat this menace by launching a new program over the next five years. The Promoting the Quality of Medicines (PQM) Program, a $35 million cooperative agreement, will serve as a primary mechanism to help assure the quality, safety and efficacy of medicines that are essential to USAID's priority health programs. USAID is a U.S. government agency that provides economic, development and humanitarian assistance around the world in support of the foreign policy goals of the United States. USP is a nonprofit scientific organization that develops globally recognized standards for the quality of medicines. Building on a multi-year USAID-USP partnership in this arena that assists health officials and others in 28 countries around the world, the program will increase work to address the significant public health challenge posed by substandard and counterfeit medicines. According to the U.S.-based Center for Medicines in the Public Interest, counterfeit drug sales alone will reach $75 billion globally in 2010, an increase of more than 90 percent from 2005. Various factors contribute to the growth of substandard and counterfeit medicines, including the globalization of trade and weak regulatory capacity in developing countries. "Substandard and counterfeit medicines represent a threat to public health worldwide but pose a particular problem in developing countries, where lack of financial, technical and other resources make it difficult to protect the drug supply chains," said Gloria Steele, USAID acting assistant administrator for global health. "Such medicines have the potential to undermine decades of investments in public health. Without good quality, safe medicines to treat diseases such as HIV/AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis, the impact of other health initiatives may be weakened. The PQM Program focuses on this critical aspect of combating these diseases." "The lives of patients are put in serious jeopardy when they take substandard or counterfeit drugs," said Roger L. Williams, M.D., chief executive officer of USP. "Such 'medicines' have health as well as economic implications. Moreover, substandard medicines contribute to the development of drug-resistant strains of infectious diseases. Such strains are a leading challenge in the fight against malaria, HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis." The program will help ensure the quality, safety and efficacy of medicines by: working with countries to strengthen their medicines regulatory bodies, which are responsible for protecting the supply chains; increasing the supply of good-quality medicines, which often are not available, with shortages giving health facilities no choice but to use medicines that may not have undergone rigorous quality control; combating the availability of counterfeit and substandard medicines through testing programs and other means; and conducting global advocacy to raise awareness of the dangers of substandard and counterfeit drugs. - USP More information:
•Establishing the first large-scale continuous monitoring program for
medicines quality in Africa, Asia and Latin America. The DQI Program developed
robust drug quality surveillance programs in 19 nations, leading to recalls of
substandard and counterfeit medicines and closures of illicit pharmacies
operating in the countries. This had never been done before in any developing
region other than on an ad hoc basis. Monitoring is conducted largely through
107 sentinel sites that were established to perform quality testing. In July
2009, one such sentinel site in Ghana detected a counterfeit antimalarial drug
that was being sold to patients as Novartis' Coartem®. The product, which lacked
any active ingredient, was promptly seized from pharmacies in Ghana by the
country's Foods and Drug Board, helping prevent further harm to patients who may
be using the drug for treatment of their "uncomplicated" malaria, which is
endemic in 108 countries, 45 of which are in Africa. The new PQM Program will expand on these and other activities in Asia, Eastern Europe, Latin America, and sub-Saharan Africa. Contact: Francine Pierson
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