The country’s drug companies have attracted the highest number of enforcements from the American drug regulator in 2013, a year that has seen the US Food and Drug Administration turning stricter to ensure compliance levels and quality of medicines.
According to FDA data, so far this year, as many as 19 drug manufacturing factories across India were barred from supplying medicines to the US, the world’s largest drug market.
The restrictions include the import alerts imposed recently on the facilities of Ranbaxy, Wockhardt and RPG Life Sciences.
In the same period, Chinese drug manufacturing facilities faced seven FDA import alerts; Australian, Canadian and Japanese ones two each; and South African and German units one each.
There were no alerts on those in the UK.
Also, Israel, a major supplier of generic drugs with companies like Teva, does not figure in the FDA’s drug import alert list at all.
For India, compared with preceding years, the number has gone up significantly only in 2013, indicating a possible change in the regulator’s stance.
For instance, domestic manufacturing facilities received merely two import alerts in 2012.
In 2011, while there were seven import alerts, most were issued to active pharmaceutical ingredient or raw material manufacturing plants. Aurobindo Pharma, for its Hyderabad facility, was one of the major companies that received an alert in 2011.
In 2010, there were no US import alerts in India.
In 2009, Ranbaxy’s two facilities -- at Paonta Sahib (Himachal Pradesh) and Dewas (Madhya Pradesh) -- were the only units to be barred from supplying medicines to the US.
Experts say, the growing share of Indian firms in the US generic market, besides the FDA’s increasingly
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