Opinion

Tried And Tested

India is a favoured destination for human clinical trials. Unfortunately, poor and illiterate people are exploited as norms are flouted with impunity.

Tried And Tested
info_icon

Around 2005, India turned into a favoured destination for foreign pharma companies to carry out human clinical trials for new medicines, vaccines and other treatments. Two things changed바카라amendments in the patent law and clinical trial rules. From 2005 onw­ard, clinical trials in India registered an exponential inc­rease바카라from 180 to 506 in 2010.

The Indian patent law was amended from 바카라process patent바카라 to 바카라product patent바카라 in January 2005 to comply with the World Trade Organisation바카라s Trade-Related Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) provisions. Under the process patent, Indian pharma companies had their own ways of manufacturing medicines developed by western pharma companies. Introduction of product patent stopped this manipulation and forced Indian firms to collaborate with western companies.

Western firms also found it profitable to use India as its R&D base as they got volunteers for clinical trials at much cheaper rates due to poor and illiterate citizens as compared to their own countries.

Simultaneously, the government also amended the Drug and Cosmetics Rules and permitted clinical trials without a phase lag. The amendment allowed concurrent trials of the same phase in India and other countries. Earlier, a foreign company needed to complete phase III trials in its own country before applying for a phase II trial in India.

The impact of these changes resulted in a sudden inc­rease in the number of clinical trials that western pharma companies outsourced to India. A new category of companies known as Contract Research Organisations (CROs) cropped up whose prime work is to arrange patients and volunteers for the clinical trials.

info_icon

The changes apparently threw open the floodgates for vio­lations of laid down norms, some by the sector regulator, the Drug Controller General of India (DCGI) itself. This has been pointed out in the 59th report of the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Health and Family Welfare. The committee randomly selected 42 medicines out of 2,167 that DCGI had approved between January 2001 and November 2010 and found several violations in the approval process. 바카라A total of 31 new drugs were app­roved in the period of January, 2008 to October 2010 without conducting clinical trials on Indian patients,바카라 it said, one among many other irregularities.

The DCGI has come under the scanner once again after it approved two COVID-19 vaccines on January 3 for universal vaccination in India; questions have been raised in the manner the approvals were granted to both of them.  The Progressive Medicos and Scientific Forums, a group of doctors and researchers, have raised concerns over the 바카라undue haste and disconcerting exigencies in pushing for app­roval and deployment of the vaccine without sufficient scientific data on the safety and efficacy of the vaccine바카라.

What went wrong

Will a drug regulator of a country showcase its citizens as appealing subjects for clinical trials? The DCGI, which regulates all drug and cosmetics-related activities, did it in 2013 to attract western pharma companies. Surinder Singh, then DCGI, in the report 바카라Resource advantages as destination for clinical trials바카라, highlighted India as a selling point for clinical trials for the following reasons:  바카라Large, diverse, therapy-naïve; advantage of having 6 out of 7 gen­etic varieties; large patients pool in acute/chronic disease segment; Increasing number of patients in lifestyle disorders segment, HIV, oncology.바카라   

Dr Vikas Bajpai, Centre of Social Medicine and Community Health, Jawaharlal Nehru University in a rev­iew article, Rise of Clinical Trials Industry in India: An Analysis, published in 2013, has mentioned it. 바카라These are facts which should ideally shame the collective conscience of the country but have most unfortunately been paraded as a virtue by many, among them the highest official of the government of India who is meant to supervise the clinical trials바카라the DCGI included,바카라 Dr Bajpai wrote.

After a PIL was filed by the Swasthya Adhikar Manch, the Supreme Court said that all clinical trials in India would be based on three basic principles, (i) assessment of risk versus benefit to the patients, (ii) innovation vis-a-vis exi­sting therapeutic option and (iii) unmet medical need in the country.

Amulya Nidhi, co-convenor, of the manch says that his NGO  produced several cases before the court in which ill­iterate and poor people were used as subjects for clinical trials. 바카라HPV vaccine trial started in July 2009 and 25,000 girls between the age of 10 to 14 were vaccinated in Andhra Pradesh and Gujarat. After reports of death of girls, an enq­uiry was conducted and a lot of ethical violations were found,바카라 Nidhi says.

He adds, 바카라Many girls were poor, unable to understand the local languages. Many of them were in hostels where the warden gave the consent rather than their parents.바카라 Nidhi says that after the SC initiatives, the government amended the law and notified the New Drugs and Clinical Trials Rules, 2019 which addressed a lot of issues such as compensation to volunteers in case of side effects and deaths.  

However, legal experts associated with this case say  the government was yet to address crucial issues related to transparency and accountability. 바카라We have given our suggestions to the court in the last hearing in December 2019 in which we have demanded that the phase lag to be allowed, the functioning of the CROs to be defined, the introduction of a charter of volunteers and their rights to be introduced among other things,바카라 senior lawyer at the Supreme Court Sanjay Parikh says. 바카라Volunteers should be invited through public notices. CROs should be removed from the whole trial process.바카라

He is of the view that there should be a provision of criminal action against doctors and sponsors if they don바카라t follow the ethical norms of the trial. 

×