Gilead
to ship 450,000 remdesivir vials to India as COVID-19 cases surge
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[April 27, 2021]
(Reuters) -Gilead Sciences Inc said on
Monday it will give India at least 450,000 vials of its antiviral drug
remdesivir and help boost production, as the world's second-most
populous country reels from surging coronavirus cases.
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Remdesivir is approved in India for restricted emergency use to
treat severe COVID-19 cases, but hospitals are facing supply
shortages due to indiscriminate use and the drug is being sold at
over 10 times its listed price in the black market.
The shortage has raised concerns about hoarding as people queue up
outside clinics and hospitals to buy the drug and millions take to
social media to secure supplies.
Earlier this month, India banned the export of the drug and the
active pharmaceutical ingredients (API) used to make it.
Seven Indian companies have licensed the drug from Gilead, with an
installed capacity of about 3.9 million units per month. Gilead said
on Monday all of them were scaling up their batch sizes and adding
new manufacturing facilities and local contract manufacturers.
There are doubts about the drug's effectiveness in treating
COVID-19. The World Health Organization in November issued a
conditional recommendation against the use of remdesivir in
hospitalised patients, but India has continued to use it.
A senior Indian government health official said last week that
remdesivir is only for those patients who need oxygen. "I am
appealing that the hype over this medicine should be decreased, and
it should be used in a rational manner," Vinod Kumar Paul said.
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On Monday, Russian
pharmaceutical firm Pharmasyntez said it was
ready to ship up to 1 million packs of
remdesivir to India by end-May once it received
the Russian government's approval.
India has reported more than 300,000 new
COVID-19 cases per day over the past six days.
It has an official tally of 17.31 million
infections and 195,123 deaths, health ministry
data showed, although health experts say the
figures likely run higher.
Nations including Britain, Germany and the
United States have pledged support, while the
World Health Organization termed the situation
as "beyond heartbreaking".
(Reporting by Trisha Roy and Sayantani Ghosh in
Bengaluru; Additional reporting by Anuron Mitra;
Editing by Arun Koyyur and Saumyadeb Chakrabarty)
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