Guest guest Posted November 14, 2004 Report Share Posted November 14, 2004 Ranbaxy ends tie up in clinical research Khozem Merchant / Mumbai November 12, 2004 Ranbaxy Laboratories, India's biggest pharmaceuticals company, has ended its partnership with a clinical research organisation whose data for Ranbaxy's generic anti-Aids drugs raised doubts about the authenticity of the medicines. This week it emerged that Ranbaxy had withdrawn all of its antiretroviral drugs from a list of HIV treatments approved by the World Health Organisation, which said Ranbaxy had found " discrepancies " in the data, suggesting that its generic drugs might not be exact copies of patented originals. Ranbaxy yesterday said that it would submit fresh dossiers to the WHO prepared by a contract research organisation from outside India. The first clinical tests had been outsourced to a contract research organisation in India. Lembit Rago, head of medicines policy and safety at WHO, said there was no evidence that Ranbaxy's HIV treatments were unsafe or ineffective. " Lack of evidence that they are bioequivalent to the branded products does not mean we have evidence that they are not bioequivalent, " he said. However, the rapid expansion of India's clinical research organisation (CRO) industry in recent years had outpaced the ability of companies to guarantee the quality of the research. " We are quite pleased to see the Indian government has tightened the control of CROs, " he said. This is the second such recent blow for Ranbaxy. Germany's Schwarz Pharma last week abandoned phase two trials of Ranbaxy's molecule to treat prostate illnesses " due to unclear pre-clinical findings " . Ranbaxy licensed the molecule to Schwarz Pharma in 2002 and has received $10.3m in milestone payments. Ranbaxy is now conducting phase two trials of the molecule in India. The WHO withdrew three Ranbaxy antiretroviral drugs from its list of prequalified products in August and two similar treatments by Cipla, another Indian drugs company, because of concern about the authenticity of data on their safety. The organisation's action against the two companies highlights concern about the quality of low-cost drugs manufactured in countries such as India, where widespread bio-medical skills has given rise to a thriving $5bn export-focused pharmaceuticals industry. Growing downward pressure on the price of generic drugs has hit Ranbaxy, whose sales for the first nine months of 2004 grew 4 per cent. In 2003, Ranbaxy's sales totalled Rs 4,460 crore ($1bn) and, according to analysts, the company is set to improve the performance by 14 per cent for 2004. Additional reporting by Firn http://www.business-standard.com/common/storypage.php?hpFlag=Y & chklogin=N & autono\ =172406 & leftnm=lmnu1 & lselect=0 & leftindx=1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.