Tuesday, May 22nd, 2012
AFP
PARIS – More than a third of malaria drugs examined by scientists in
Southeast Asia were fake, and a similar proportion analyzed in Africa
were below standard, doctors warned on Tuesday.
“These findings are a wake-up call demanding a series of
interventions to better define and eliminate both criminal production
and poor manufacturing of antimalarial drugs,” said Joel Breman of the
Fogarty International Center at the US National Institutes of Health
(NIH).
Trawling through surveys and published literature, the researchers
found that in seven Southeast Asian countries, 36 percent of 1,437
samples, from five categories of drugs were counterfeit.
Thirty-percent of the samples failed a test of their pharmaceutical ingredients.
In 21 sub-Saharan countries, 20 percent of more than 2,500 samples
tested in six drug classes turned out to be falsified, and 35 percent
were below pharmaceutical norms.
Sub-standard medications are a major problem in the fight against
malaria, a disease which killed 655,000 people in 2010, according to
the UN’s World Health Organisation (WHO).
Many of the drugs that are being faked or poorly manufactured are artemisin derivatives, the study said.
This is a special worry, for artemisinins are the frontline
treatment for malaria, replacing drugs to which the malaria parasite
has become resistant.
The study says there are many causes for the problem, ranging from
widespread self-prescription of drugs to shoddy controls to monitor
drug quality and prosecute counterfeiters.
“Poor-quality antimalarial drugs are very likely to jeopardise the
unprecedented progress and investments in control and elimination of
malaria made in the past decade,” said Breman.
Last month, the Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation at the
University of Washington in Seattle reported that artemisin-resistant
malaria which was first spotted in Cambodia in 2006 has since surged
800 kilometers (500 miles) westward to the Thailand-Myanmar border.
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