WHO says contaminated cough syrup made in India found in Western Pacific
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[April 25, 2023]
By Abinaya V, Shivam Patel and Jennifer Rigby
(Reuters) -Contaminated cough syrup made by an Indian company has been
found in the Marshall Islands and Micronesia, the World Health
Organization (WHO) said on Tuesday, after a spate of child deaths linked
to other syrups in some countries last year.
The WHO statement did not say whether any children in the Marshall
Islands or Micronesia had fallen sick.
But it said samples from a batch of imported cough syrup, with the
product name Guaifenesin syrup TG syrup, were contaminated with
unacceptable amounts of diethylene glycol and ethylene glycol, which are
toxic to humans when consumed and can prove fatal. The contamination was
identified by Australia's regulator, the Therapeutic Goods
Administration (TGA).
The new alert follows three similar warnings issued last year by the WHO
about contaminated cough syrups for children. These syrups, made by
different manufacturers in India and Indonesia, have been linked to the
deaths of more than 300 children – mainly aged under 5 – from acute
kidney injury in Gambia, Indonesia and Uzbekistan.
The stated manufacturer of the medicines in the latest alert was India's
QP Pharmachem Ltd, based in Punjab and the marketer of the product was
Trillium Pharma, based in India's Haryana, the WHO said.
Neither QP Pharmachem nor Trillium have provided guarantees to WHO on
the safety and quality of these products, the agency said in the
statement.
QP Pharmachem's managing director Sudhir Pathak told Reuters that it had
tested a sample from the exported batch following a recent query from
the local state drug regulator.
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A logo is pictured on the headquarters
of the World Health Orgnaization (WHO) ahead of a meeting of the
Emergency Committee on the novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) in Geneva,
Switzerland, January 30, 2020. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse
"We found it satisfactory and the
regulator found it satisfactory too," he said.
Pathak also said the product is distributed in India too and the
company has not received any complaints so far.
Pathak said QP Pharmachem had permission from the Indian government
to export 18,000 bottles of the syrup only to Cambodia. It was
unclear how the product ended up in the Marshall Islands and
Micronesia.
Trillium Pharma did not immediately respond to a request for
comment.
The WHO said countries needed to step up surveillance to find more
contaminated products.
Its head of substandard medicines, Rutendo Kuwana, told Reuters
earlier this month that it was working with countries to help test
medicines when asked to do so, after issuing a global call to action
in January to help prevent more deaths.
"We are in the process of trying to collect samples and test them,"
he said.
(Reporting by Abinaya Vijayaraghavan in Bengaluru, Shivam Patel in
Delhi and Jennifer Rigby in London; Editing by Andrew Heavens, Simon
Cameron-Moore and Jacqueline Wong)
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