The Indian drug regulator is set to conduct routine inspections at the manufacturing facilities of Chinese and other foreign companies supplying active pharmaceutical ingredients to domestic pharmaceutical firms.
The move follows a spate of international regulatory enforcements on Indian drug firms, which import more than 80 per cent of their API or raw material requirement for manufacturing finished formulations, mainly from China and Italy.
The drug regulator, along with the commerce ministry, has already expedited talks with the Chinese government, regulator and industry to conduct these inspections on a routine basis.
Drug Controller General of India G N Singh, back from a six-day trip to China last week, said: “Many API-related quality issues have been flagged recently.
“Since we source a majority of these from China, it is essential to ensure quality and efficacy is maintained at manufacturing facilities supplying to Indian companies.”
Sources told Business Standard the government and the regulator were anticipating more stringent checks by international regulators, especially on API sourcing.
Lately, a number of API manufacturing facilities from India, as well as China, have come under the scanner of the US Food and Drug Administration.
This has led to import alerts barring their supplies of medicines to the US.
In the past, the regulator has conducted inspections in China, but these have been sporadic and have often faced resistance.
In 2011, a three-member delegation, comprising inspectors from DCGI’s office, was sent back by a Chinese bulk drug exporter to India.
The regulator again visited China the following year, inspected some facilities and came back to cancel licences of various Chinese bulk drug exporters.
According to the health ministry, around 10 Chinese bulk drug manufacturing firms were inspected in 2011 and 2012 and 16