- Rise in online pharmacies sees counterfeit drugs go global (thelancet.com)
Increasing public use of online pharmacies, along with a new mass producer of fake medicines, have widened the global market for falsified drugs…. John Clark.. heads up Pfizer's Global Security team…has a question for doctors: do you know where your patients get their drugs from?...The official term for these types of medicines is spurious/falsely-labelled/falsified/counterfeit drugs….developing countries are more than aware of with estimates of the prevalence of counterfeit drugs in some parts of Africa and Asia reaching as high as 70%...it's hard to find a drug that's not being copied or falsified...Counterfeit drugs have been found in 124 countries across all continents and between 2011–14 more than 55 million doses were seized by authorities.
- Meds to Beds Program Provides More Opportunities for Patient Counseling (pharmacytimes.com)
Mail, pizza, now medicine: Some health care systems are allowing patients to get their discharge medication delivered while they are still in the hospital… main focus was on patient education and medication counseling…the program allows for more quality time with patients to make sure their medications are safe and effective for them…"When we deliver medications to patients’ bedsides immediately prior to discharge, patients seem more willing to listen and learn about their medications than when they are at a retail pharmacy in the community,"
- AmerisourceBergen to buy PharMEDium for $2.58 billion (reuters.com)
Drug distributor AmerisourceBergen Corp agreed to buy PharMEDium Healthcare Holdings Inc for $2.58 billion…expanding its business of supplying compounded drugs to hospitals…"PharMEDium brings ABC a complementary service line that is undergoing a growth renaissance as hospitals more aggressively outsource compounded sterile needs in wake of new government regulations,"…
- European API makers must invest to compete with India, says Infa Group (in-pharmatechnologist.com)
Clients are turning their backs on low-cost economies like India and returning to Infa Group, the Italian API maker says…Economies such as India and China have been viewed as low-cost alternatives to Europe and the US for the supply of active pharmaceutical ingredients, but over the past few years, pharma’s changing demands – coupled with concerns over a drop in quality standards – are seeing some customers return back West…This is certainly the case for the Infa Group, one of many European API makers… has seen a number of its main clients return from Asia...
- It’s not easy being green, but biotechs should consider it according to Piramal (in-pharmatechnologist.com)
Pharma and biotech firms not using ‘green chemistry’ to make their products incur higher costs and risk losing market share… There is considerable drug industry interest in ‘green chemistry’ processes that improve efficiency and cut waste – at least that is according to the corporate social responsibility reports issued by firms like Pfizer, GSK and Roche…Whether these efforts are PR – so called greenwashing - or genuine is difficult to judge…while some drugmakers are investing to try and be environmentally-friendly others, particularly smaller biotechs, have yet to commit to greener manufacturing.
- Alkermes’ schizophrenia drug Aristada gets FDA nod (reuters.com)
Food and Drug Administration…approved Alkermes Plc's longer-acting injectable version of … schizophrenia pill Abilify (Aristada,aripiprazole lauroxil), making the treatment available in two doses…Abilify, developed by Japanese drugmaker Otsuka Pharmaceuticals and sold…by Bristol-Myers Squibb Co, is already facing generic competition.
- California governor signs bill legalizing physician-assisted suicide (reuters.com)
Physician-assisted suicide will become legal in California under a bill signed into law…by…Governor Jerry Brown, despite intense opposition from some religious and disability rights groups…allows doctors to prescribe medication to end a patient's life if two doctors agree the person has only six months to live and is mentally competent…Advocates for physician-assisted suicide have tried for decades to persuade California to legalize the practice as a way to help end-stage cancer and other patients to die with less pain and suffering…Opponents…said the bill would invite insurance companies to take advantage of poor patients by offering to pay for the cost of life-ending drugs but not for the expensive treatments that could save lives.
- India considers drug testing labs in each state (fiercepharmaasia.com)
India may house drug testing laboratories in each state under an INR17.5 billion ($270 million) plan to shore up quality… the aim is to have at least one dedicated drug testing laboratory in every state, with 10 states currently not equipped with any testing services for drugs… India approved the spending to upgrade its federal and state drug regulation system with approval from the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs…funds, to be spent…on items such as new laboratories and a training academy for regulatory and drug testing officials, are seen as crucial to fixing quality issues that have bedeviled manufacturers and testing firms.
- Experts critical of America’s right-to-try drug laws (thelancet.com)
Laws that allow terminally ill patients access to experimental drugs are gaining momentum across the USA, but experts say they could do more harm than good…the right-to-try laws...are designed to circumvent the FDA…proponents of the laws view the agency's bureaucracy as a roadblock, not a pathway, for desperate patients seeking experimental drugs. "When patients are almost willing to try anything to live…we shouldn't see government stand in the way"…Critics...say the laws are misguided, that drug companies, not the FDA, restrict the availability of experimental drugs because of cost, limited supplies, or concerns about the effect on clinical trials…skeptics believe the laws could do more harm than good, possibly raising false hopes about drugs whose safety and effectiveness have not yet been proven…
- First liquid aspirin’ maker seeks licensing deal (in-pharmatechnologist.com)
Innovate Pharmaceuticals has launched…shelf-stable liquid aspirin, and says it is on the look-out for a licensing partner for the "$500m" market…. Innovate worked with chemicals company Croda for five years on engineering excipients to make what it calls a "truly liquid" aspirin. The pharma firm claims its product allows faster and more complete absorption than other delivery routes, "resulting in potentially drastic reductions in gastric side effects."






