Regulators tighten
scrutiny of India clinical research firms
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[July 10, 2015] By
Zeba Siddiqui and Ben Hirschler
MUMBAI/LONDON (Reuters) - The U.S. Food and
Drug Administration (FDA) and the World Health Organisation have
intensified investigations into India's clinical research firms,
industry officials said, after recent probes revealed two leading firms
had violated standards.
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The scrutiny is likely to further hurt India's reputation as a
global pharmaceutical hub, as it follows sanctions imposed by the
FDA and other regulators on Indian generic drugmakers over
manufacturing quality lapses.
India's clinical research organisations (CROs) conduct drug trials
for global drugmakers seeking to cut costs. Consultants Frost &
Sullivan had forecast the sector's sales to more than double to $1
billion in 2016 from $485 million in 2012.
"In the last few months, there have been several and more frequent
audits of CROs by regulators," said Apurva Shah, managing director
of Veeda Clinical Research, which says on its website it provides
services to the world's top 10 drugmakers.
"The time, intensity and the detail of the audits has increased," he
said, specifically referring to FDA audits.
The FDA declined to comment.
Inspectors at the WHO, which last week issued a warning to
Chennai-based Quest Life Sciences over defective trials work, are
also looking into lapses at other Indian CROs, a person with
knowledge of the matter told Reuters.
Asked about its inspections, the WHO said it was not specifically
targeting India. "These inspections are arranged based on risk
management principles," it said in a statement.
Quest has said the issue was isolated, and would be resolved in six
months. But the WHO warning followed a probe last year involving one
of India's largest CROs, GVK Biosciences, which resulted in the
withdrawal of approvals for hundreds of generic drugs in Europe.
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In the case of both GVK and Quest, regulators found duplication of
patients' electrocardiograms (ECGs), or heart records. Regulators
are now taking a lot of time inspecting ECG data at all CROs, Shah
said.
D.A. Prasanna, head of the industry lobby group Association of
Contract Research Organisations, said the probes cast a bad light on
a sector already facing challenges at home. India's pharma regulator
has yet to draft concrete guidelines to conduct trials three years
after the Supreme Court halted 162 trials, citing unethical
practices.
"If we see an unreasonable rise in the frequency of foreign
inspections over small issues - like in the case of ECGs - then I
think we need to be concerned as an industry," Prasanna said.
(Editing by Sumeet Chatterjee and Miral Fahmy)
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