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Counterfeit Drugs Becoming Big Business Worldwide

Counterfeit Drugs Business

MATTHEW PERRONE   02/15/12 06:18 PM ET  AP

WASHINGTON — The discovery that a fake version of the widely used cancer medicine Avastin is circulating in the United States is raising new fears that the multibillion-dollar drug-counterfeiting trade is increasingly making inroads in the U.S.

The criminal practice has largely been relegated to poor countries with lax regulations. But with more medicines and drug ingredients for sale in the U.S. being manufactured overseas, American authorities are afraid more counterfeits will find their way into this country, putting patients' lives at risk.

The Avastin discovery follows other recent instances in the U.S. of counterfeiting, involving such drugs as Viagra, the cholesterol medicine Lipitor and the weight-loss pill Alli.

"We do know there are counterfeits continuing to try and make their way onto the U.S. supply chain," said Connie Jung, an associate director in the Food and Drug Administration's office of drug security.

The FDA announced Tuesday it is investigating fake vials of Avastin that were sold to at least 19 doctors and clinics, including 16 sites in California, two in Texas and one in Chicago. Tests showed the vials did not contain the active ingredient in Avastin, which is given intravenously in hospitals, clinics and doctors' offices to treat several types of cancer.

The contents of the vials are still being analyzed, and the FDA said it has not received any reports of patients who were harmed.

FDA officials said the counterfeit Avastin was imported from Britain and distributed by Volunteer Distribution, a wholesaler based in Gainesboro, Tenn. British regulators notified the FDA about the products in December, but the agency didn't confirm they were fake until last week.

The FDA gave assurances Wednesday that the U.S. remains one of the most secure pharmaceutical markets in the world. But the news sent cancer doctors scrambling to check their records.

Mary Mathias, a nurse who orders drugs for one doctor on the FDA list – Dr. Phillip L. Chatham in Granada Hills, Calif., – said they had stopped using the company in question at least a year ago.

Because Avastin treatments are spaced one to two weeks apart, it is not likely that someone would get more than one infusion from the same vial. And because these are people facing a life-threatening disease, it is hard to say whether missing one treatment with the real drug would compromise their care.

Gauging harm from a counterfeit cancer treatment is nearly impossible, said Dr. Robert C. Young, former president of the Fox Chase Cancer Center in Philadelphia and now a consultant to cancer centers.

A colon cancer patient, for example, might receive 18 to 20 Avastin infusions over six months. Missing one dose seems unlikely to have a dramatic effect on survival odds, but it's not provable either way because cancer's course and a patient's response to treatment are not predictable, he said.

Counterfeits have traditionally been more of a concern in developing regions like Asia and Latin America, where as many as 30 percent of drugs sold are fake, according to the World Health Organization. The group estimates just 1 percent of drugs dispensed in the U.S. and other developed nations are fake.

But incidents of counterfeiting reported by drugmakers have increased steadily over the decade to more than 1,700 worldwide last year, though only 6 percent of those were in the U.S. There are few reliable estimates on the value of the global counterfeit drug trade, though most place it in the tens of billions.

Counterfeiting has become more prevalent as pharmaceutical supply chains increasingly stretch across continents. Over 80 percent of the active ingredients used in U.S. pharmaceuticals are now manufactured overseas, according to a recent congressional report, and experts say this has made it easier to move counterfeit products into this country.

"With today's transportation networks, it's no longer a stretch to move these materials from a source in Pakistan or India to the U.S." said Tom Kubic, president of Pharmaceutical Security Institute, a trade association set up by two dozen pharmaceutical companies.

In 2005, federal prosecutors indicted 11 employees of a Missouri business on charges of conspiring to sell $42 million in counterfeit Lipitor. It was manufactured in Costa Rica and illegally imported to the U.S., where it was sold to wholesalers.

Industry experts also say a combination of big profits and low penalties has made drug counterfeiting an increasingly attractive business for criminals in the U.S. and abroad.

A single vial of Avastin sells for $2,400, and the drug had nearly $2.7 billion in U.S. sales last year, while the sentence for drug counterfeiting in the United States is about three years in prison. That compares with 15 years for counterfeiting money.

John Clark, head of global security for Pfizer Inc., said counterfeiters can make several million dollars quickly and, if they're caught, get off with as little as six months in jail. He also said counterfeiters can set up an operation at a fairly low cost – perhaps $50,000, including about $20,000 for a pill press.

"It's a no-brainer for criminal organizations that it's worth a gamble," Clark said.

Clark said Pfizer's anti-counterfeiting team around the world has seen a number of fake vaccines and biologic drugs sold in developing countries, not just pill-based drugs.

"They're getting much more sophisticated," often getting ahold of legitimate vials that had held such medicines, from patients, trash cans or recycling operations, and then filling them with oil or water.

___

AP writers Linda A. Johnson in Trenton, N.J., and Marilynn Marchione in Milwaukee contributed to this story

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WASHINGTON — The discovery that a fake version of the widely used cancer medicine Avastin is circulating in the United States is raising new fears that the multibillion-dollar drug-counterfeitin...
WASHINGTON — The discovery that a fake version of the widely used cancer medicine Avastin is circulating in the United States is raising new fears that the multibillion-dollar drug-counterfeitin...
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07:33 PM on 02/16/2012
Amen!
06:48 PM on 02/16/2012
now you will have to play chemist
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jannas2cents
06:13 PM on 02/16/2012
I don't trust generic prescription drugs because there is no guarantee they're identical to the original brand, and there's no way of knowing for certain where they came from and who made them and whether or not the manufacturer is reliable. Most generics are now made in India. What worries me is that pharmacies, insurance companies and doctors typically prescribe generics without even consulting the patient. I see ads in magazines all the time for "Canadian Pharmacies" where prescription prices are so much lower than in the US, but these pharmacies are not always situated in Canada. I called one 800 number and learned the advertised "Canadian Pharmacy" was actually in the Cayman Islands, which to me constitutes false and misleading advertising and I would not feel comfortable buying prescription medications from a company like this. As consumers, we have to be so careful and, for many of us, it's more important to pay the higher price in order to be certain that you know what you're ingesting and what it could do to you if it's a pirated fake.
07:32 PM on 02/16/2012
Absoutely 100% correct! I buy brand name whenever possible. All those cheap drugs are dangerous to the health of Americans! And there is no way for patients to know what's what. We're all lucky if you just get a placebo, instead of a dangerous drug (as happened with the Baldwin twins with heparin in Cal.) It's not just India, but China and many others. Someone taking a subpotent drug may have symptoms return and/or worsen; someone taking a too-potent drug may suffer severe adverse reactions and no one would know why. Americans and the government want cheap generic drugs; well, you're getting them! Be careful what you wish for!
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GOODDOC1
"civil war" is an oxymoron
07:45 PM on 02/16/2012
The Baldwin twins did not get a dangerous drug. The heparin they received was adult strength, not the neotatal doseage they needed.
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lindamom
never fry chicken in the nude
08:46 PM on 02/16/2012
I agree with you about some generics. I have NO thyroid due to surgery and must have the exact amount of chemical therapy to make me live and so many other variables are thrown in with that. The thyroid is an amazing gland and I really don't trust the synthetic since they went generic. My levels change from year-to-year and it never was that way when I took swine thyroid - yes PIG. My pharmacy doesn't even carry the "real" drug anymore, only the generic.
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SHIRLEY CARR
optimist with experience sez
03:20 PM on 02/16/2012
My counterfeit life by the FDA! What a way to go!
llwlknsn
Adequate words fail me.
02:06 PM on 02/16/2012
Bull**** The US is not one of the most secure. We have lobbyists working tirelessly day and night fighting for the right to sell you counterfit drugs and weakening regulations. YOU are on your own. If you have concerns about this start a testing regimen on your own to make sure the drugs you are taking are actually legitimate.

No one is looking out for you, DO NOT believe for an instant that the elected officials currently in Government give a damn about your welfare.

THIS is how a Plutarchy operates.
04:46 PM on 02/16/2012
They're hard at work on behalf of their pharmaceutical industry corporate friends.
01:21 PM on 02/16/2012
There are certainly two sides to this issue... I understand the HUGE developmental cost and getting FDA approval are imense for any drug ... however when you look at something like HIV medications that literally cost a few cents to produce and the cost to US consumers runs in the thousands per month. Then consider Africa where something like 40% of the population is invected with HIV and the inability to pay for any kind of treatment. Obviously a counterfit will surface. I do realize there is literally billions of dollars being donated and given to this, but the question is what is the ethical approach? Let millions die or produce an inexpensive generic and violate patent rights... tough call in my opinion.
11:04 PM on 02/16/2012
HIV drugs would be one example where getting a counterfeit drug (even for a few days) could easily prove lethal, and could result in the spread of a drug resistant strain of the virus. If you mean an approved, regulated generic, that's a different story.
11:51 AM on 02/16/2012
I am appalled by this qoute from the article above "Because Avastin treatments are spaced one to two weeks apart, it is not likely that someone would get more than one infusion from the same vial. And because these are people facing a life-threatening disease, it is hard to say whether missing one treatment with the real drug would compromise their care."
My brother has been fighting colon cancer for almost 4 years. If it weren't for EVERY ONE of his treatments that he has received, he would not be with us today! Not to mention that the insurance comanies (what portion they do cover) and the patients are having to pay for something that MAY comprimise their care. We need to get back to the AMERICAN MADE WAY.