India considers testing cough syrups before export - media
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[May 16, 2023]
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India's drug regulator has proposed testing
cough syrups in government laboratories before they are exported, media
outlet News18.com reported on Tuesday, after Indian-made syrups were
linked to dozens of deaths in Gambia and Uzbekistan last year.
India's health ministry received the proposal from the Central Drugs
Standard Control Organisation(CDSCO) this month and is considering it,
the news website quoted an unidentified ministry official as saying.
"The proposal is to test the finished goods at government labs before
exporting," the official told News18.com.
The ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The official said the syrups could be tested at various laboratories run
by the federal government or states.
The CDSCO has also proposed making it mandatory for exporters to produce
a "certificate of analysis" of batches exported from an approved
laboratory, the news outlet reported.
India's $41 billion pharmaceutical industry received a major jolt last
year when cough syrups made by two companies based near New Delhi were
linked to the deaths of at least 70 children in Gambia and 19 in
Uzbekistan.
The World Health Organization said last year that Indian manufacturer
Maiden Pharmaceuticals Ltd's syrups, exported to Gambia, contained
lethal toxins ethylene glycol (EG) and diethylene glycol (DEG) – used in
car brake fluid.
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Grieving parents hold up signs during a
news conference, calling for justice for the deaths of children
linked to contaminated cough syrups, in Serekunda, Gambia, November
4, 2022. In October 2022, the deaths of more than 70 Gambian
children from Acute Kidney Injury were linked by global health
officials to cough syrups made in India and contaminated with
ethylene glycol (EG) and diethylene glycol (DEG). REUTERS/Edward
McAllister/File Photo
Uzbekistan said in December that
children died there after taking cough syrup made by another Indian
company, Marion Biotech, which were contaminated with EG or DEG.
Both Indian companies have denied the accusations.
The ingredients can be used by unscrupulous actors as a substitute
for propylene glycol, which is a key base of syrupy medicines –
because they can cost much less.
India's drugs regulator told the WHO in December that the propylene
glycol used by both Maiden and Marion came from two separate
Delhi-based suppliers.
(Reporting by Sakshi Dayal; Editing by Robert Birsel)
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