India allows cough syrup firm linked to Uzbek deaths to re-open factory
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[October 11, 2023]
By Krishna N. Das
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India's northern state of Uttar Pradesh has
permitted the resumption of most production at a factory owned by Marion
Biotech, which produced cough syrups Uzbekistan linked to the deaths of
65 children last year, an order seen by Reuters shows.
The firm is among three Indian companies whose cough syrups the World
Health Organization (WHO) and other agencies have linked to the deaths
of 141 children in Uzbekistan, Gambia and Cameroon, in one of the
world's worst such waves of poisoning.
"There is no known case of a lack of quality in other medicines
manufactured by the firm," the drug controller of the state where Marion
is based, and which cancelled the firm's licence in March, said in the
most recent order.
"The appeal of the manufacturing firm is partially accepted," the
official, Shashi Mohan Gupta, said in the Sept 14 order.
"Its permission to make products using propylene glycol (PG) is
cancelled, and it is allowed to make and sell all other products."
Gupta declined to comment on the letter.
On Wednesday, he told Reuters that India's controller general of drugs,
Rajeev Singh Raghuvanshi, had written to Marion Biotech to initiate a
plan of corrective and preventive actions by the company.
Raghuvanshi and the company did not immediately respond to a request for
comment.
The Marion factory in Uttar Pradesh was closed in March, after an
analysis last year by Uzbekistan's health ministry of two cough syrups
made by Marion, Ambronol and DOK-1 Max.
It showed they contained unacceptable amounts of toxins diethylene
glycol (DEG) and ethylene glycol (EG), which are usually used in
products not meant for human consumption.
Tests in January by an Indian government laboratory found 22 samples of
Marion-made syrups were "adulterated and spurious," the country's drug
controller said in March.
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Police is seen at the gate of an office of Marion Biotech, a
healthcare and pharmaceutical company and a part of the Emenox
Group, whose cough syrup has been linked to the deaths of children
in Uzbekistan, in Noida, India, December 29, 2022. REUTERS/Anushree
Fadnavis/File Photo
India's pharmaceuticals department
told parliament that tests had also shown that a sample of propylene
glycol (PG), an ingredient of cough syrups taken from Marion's
factory contained EG.
After the company appealed to the state government against the
decision, it was allowed to resume output on Aug. 11 of all products
not containing PG, the Sept. 14 order shows.
Speaking on condition of anonymity, two other sources with knowledge
of the matter told Reuters that the Marion factory remains closed
for now, pending an inspection and a review of its paperwork.
Reuters has reported that DEG and EG have been used by unscrupulous
actors as a substitute for propylene glycol because they are
cheaper.
In June, the WHO told Reuters its working theory was that in 2021,
when prices of propylene glycol spiked, one or more suppliers mixed
the cheaper toxic liquids with the legitimate chemical.
Uzbek state prosecutors told a court in Tashkent that distributors
of the contaminated Marion syrups paid officials a bribe of $33,000
to skip mandatory testing there.
The central Asian nation has put on trial 21 people - 20 Uzbeks and
one Indian - for the deaths.
(Reporting by Krishna N. Das; Additional reporting by Saurabh
Sharma; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
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