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      The comparison of the quality of selected brands of antibiotics in Tanzania sourced from different geographical regions

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          Abstract

          Objectives

          The quality of amoxicillin capsules, ceftriaxone for injection, and ciprofloxacin tablets was evaluated to determine whether there is any difference in quality when comparing the country of origin. This was undertaken because it has been claimed that antibiotics manufactured in Europe are of superior quality to those originating from Africa or Asia.

          Methods

          Samples of amoxicillin capsules, ceftriaxone for injection, and ciprofloxacin tablets were collected from three randomly selected wholesale pharmacies in each city, namely Arusha, Dar es Salaam and Mwanza, Tanzania. The collected samples of collected brands were subjected to quality control testing as per their respective pharmacopoeial monographs. Amoxil 250 mg capsules (Glaxo Wellcome, Mayenne, France), Rocephin (Roche, Switzerland) and Cipro-Denk 500 (Allphamed Pharbil Arzneimittel GmbH, Gottingen, Germany) were used as reference brands for the other generic brands of amoxicillin, ceftriaxone and ciprofloxacin, respectively.

          Results

          A total of 31 brands (10 different brands of amoxicillin capsules, 9 of ceftriaxone sodium injections, and 12 of ciprofloxacin tablets) were collected from the targeted regions and subjected to quality control testing. All samples of collected brands complied with the requirements of their respective pharmacopoeial monographs.

          Conclusions

          There was no significant difference in quality between brands of amoxicillin capsules, ceftriaxone for injection, and ciprofloxacin tablets manufactured in Africa and Asia against those manufactured in Europe in terms of compliance with the respective pharmacopoeial monographs.

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          Most cited references32

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          Prescription and non-prescription antibiotic dispensing practices in part I and part II pharmacies in Moshi Municipality, Kilimanjaro Region in Tanzania: A simulated clients approach

          Antibiotic dispensing without a prescription poses a threat to public health as it leads to excessive antibiotic consumption. Inappropriate antibiotic availability to the community has been documented to be amongst drivers of antimicrobial resistance emergence. Community pharmacies are a source of antibiotics in low and middle-income countries (LMICs). We aimed at assessing antibiotic dispensing practices by community pharmacy retailers in Moshi urban, Kilimanjaro, Tanzania and recommend interventions to improve practice. Using a Simulated Client (SC) Method, an observational cross-sectional survey of antibiotic dispensing practices was conducted from 10th June to 10th July 2017. Data analysis was done using Stata 13 (StataCorp, College Station, TX, USA). A total of 82 pharmacies were visited. Part I pharmacies were 26 (31.71%) and 56 (68.29%) were part II. Overall 92.3% (95% CI 77.8–97.6) of retailers dispensed antibiotics without prescriptions. The antibiotics most commonly dispensed without a prescription were ampiclox for cough (3 encounters) and azithromycin for painful urination (3 encounters). An oral third generation cephalosporin (cefixime) was dispensed once for painful urination without prescription by a part I pharmacy retailer. Out of 21, 15(71.43%) prescriptions with incomplete doses were accepted and had antibiotics dispensed. Out of 68, 4(5.9%) retailers gave instructions for medicine use voluntarily. None of the retailers voluntarily explained drug side-effects. In Moshi pharmacies, a high proportion of antibiotics are sold and dispensed without prescriptions. Instructions for medicine use are rarely given and none of the retailers explain side effects. These findings support the need for a legislative enforcement of prescription-only antibiotic dispensing rules and regulations. Initiation of clinician and community antibiotic stewardship and educational programs on proper antibiotic use to both pharmacists and public by the regulatory bodies are highly needed.
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            Substandard/counterfeit antimicrobial drugs.

            Substandard/counterfeit antimicrobial drugs are a growing global problem. The most common substandard/counterfeit antimicrobials include beta-lactams (among antibiotics) and chloroquine and artemisin derivatives (among antimalarials). The most common type of substandard/counterfeit antimicrobial drugs have a reduced amount of the active drug, and the majority of them are manufactured in Southeast Asia and Africa. Counterfeit antimicrobial drugs may cause increased mortality and morbidity and pose a danger to patients. Here we review the literature with regard to the issue of substandard/counterfeit antimicrobials and describe the prevalence of this problem, the different types of substandard/counterfeit antimicrobial drugs, and the consequences for the individuals and global public health. Local, national, and international initiatives are required to combat this very important public health issue. Copyright © 2015, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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              Medicines quality assurance to fight antimicrobial resistance

              Antimicrobial resistance is increasingly the focus of global attention. The adoption of resolution 68.7 at the 68th World Health Assembly 1 was pivotal in the ongoing fight against antimicrobial resistance, as the resolution urges Member States to develop national action plans to fight antimicrobial resistance by 2017. To date, 67 Member States, out of 194, have already developed such plans, while 62 others are in the process of doing so. 2 These national plans describe national efforts to combat resistance through strategies and interventions that often include strengthening surveillance of priority pathogens, increasing research efforts and optimizing the use of antimicrobials, among others. This paper suggests that product quality surveillance and other quality assurance measures should be thoroughly addressed in efforts to contain antimicrobial resistance. Including such measures in national action plans and key normative guidance documents for antimicrobial resistance is critical to containment, especially for low- and middle-income countries, where weak regulatory controls may increase the potential for poor-quality antimicrobials to be widely available. The role of product quality In 2017, the World Health Organization (WHO) adopted new and relevant definitions 3 for classifying poor-quality medicines, clarifying the understanding of substandard medical products as those that fail to meet quality standards and/or specifications, also known as out-of-specification products. Testing against public standards helps ensure the identity, strength, quality and purity of medicines and is the foundation for regulating their quality. Evidence shows that exposure to subtherapeutic levels of an antibiotic can promote development of resistant bacterial strains and increased virulence, threats that can give rise to deadlier infections. 4 In clinical practice, medication nonadherence is often cited as a driver of antimicrobial resistance. 5 However, poor-quality medicines impede the efforts of patients who take medicines correctly, creating the same subtherapeutic result and potentially ending in treatment failure. Use of poor-quality medicines also directly increases mortality and complicates the monitoring and detection of resistance as an epidemiologic driver of poor disease outcomes. One study estimated that in 2013 more than 122 000 malaria deaths in children younger than five years, that is, 3.8% of all deaths in that age group across the 39 countries studied, were associated with consumption of poor-quality antimalarials. 6 Treatment failure due to poor-quality medicines may be incorrectly attributed to a resistant infection, even in cases where standard treatment guidelines are followed. This is of particular concern in low- and middle-income countries where availability and use of susceptibility testing can be uneven, time-consuming and expensive. A study of malaria outbreaks in eastern Afghanistan and Pakistan in 2002 and 2003 determined that several cases of presumed drug resistance were in fact drug-sensitive infections treated with poor-quality medicines. 7 Such situation can cause unnecessary switches to more aggressive treatment regimens when a quality-assured first-line treatment could have been successful. Additionally, patients who are switched to new regimens may still encounter problems with the quality of medication. 8 Although disease-specific data indicate that poor-quality medicines may be a driver in the development of antimicrobial resistance, comprehensive data on the extent to which poor-quality medicines contribute to resistance are lacking. Attempting to determine the relative contribution of other key drivers, such as antimicrobial use in animal production presents similar challenges. However, existing evidence on the use of antimicrobials in animal production has prompted many stakeholders to take proactive measures based on the precautionary principle in public health. 9 The same rationale should prompt actions to address poor-quality medicines in the fight against such resistance, especially since there are proven methods that can help ensure the quality of medicines. For the reasons outlined above, any effort to optimize the use of antimicrobials should be accompanied by adequate consideration of the antimicrobial’s quality. How well an antimicrobial works is integrally linked to how well quality is assured, from manufacture to distribution and storage in the supply chain, until the product is used by the patient. Additionally, expanding access to non-quality assured antimicrobials may accelerate the rise of resistance by exposing larger populations to subtherapeutic doses of medicines. Comprehensive data on the proportion of poor-quality medicines is lacking, but data from WHO estimates that 1 in 10 medical products in low- and middle-income countries is substandard or falsified. In addition, anti-malarials and antibiotics are amongst the most commonly reported substandard and falsified medical products. 10 Currently, many national action plans on antimicrobial resistance emphasize the importance of improving access to antimicrobials while optimizing their use, but fewer plans include comprehensive measures to ensure the quality of antimicrobials. Ensuring antimicrobial quality Several approaches to ensure antimicrobial quality are being suggested, including those proposed by WHO, the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation and the Promoting the Quality of Medicines programme 11 , a programme funded by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and implemented by the United States Pharmacopeia. These approaches can be integrated into activities already included in global strategies and national action plans. Table 1 provides examples from Bangladesh, Indonesia and South Africa, of how efforts to address product quality can be incorporated in national action plans on antimicrobial resistance. These examples have been aligned with WHO’s prevent, detect, respond model for addressing poor-quality medicines 3 and represent only a fraction of the actions that countries could take to address poor-quality medicines (Box 1). Additional work is required to delineate the full range of actions that could be relevant for addressing poor-quality medicines as part of the fight against drug resistance. Table 1 Examples of goals, objectives and activities related to product quality in antimicrobial resistance national action plans from Bangladesh, Indonesia, and South Africa Country Policy goal/objective for drug quality in antimicrobial resistance national action plans Sample activities Bangladesh Strengthen regulatory mechanism to ensure access of quality antibiotics •      Ensure good manufacturing practice of antimicrobials in human and animal sectors•      Monitor manufacture of quality-assured antimicrobials•      Conduct regular post-marketing surveys on the quality of antimicrobials Indonesia Regulate post-marketing quality of drugs under the coordination of drug regulatory authority to ensure access to safe and quality antibiotics •      Coordinate quality control by the drug regulatory authority along the pharmaceutical supply chain of antimicrobial agents and active pharmaceutical ingredients•      Conduct periodic surveys to estimate the extent of non-prescription sales of antibiotics and active pharmaceutical ingredients and their drivers•      Gradually implement one drug regulatory system in human health, animal health and aquaculture South Africa Ensure the availability and accessibility of essential drugs to all citizens, to ensure the safety, efficacy and quality of drugs •      Establish national surveillance system for antimicrobial quality•      Strengthen laboratory systems to monitor quality assays and pharmacovigilance reporting systems Source: Road map of the national action plan of ARC, Bangladesh; 12 National action plan on antimicrobial resistance 2017–2019, Indonesia; 13 and Antimicrobial resistance national strategy framework 2014–2024, South Africa. 14 Box 1 Potential areas of intervention for ensuring the quality of antimicrobials in national action plans on antimicrobial resistance Strengthen the knowledge and evidence base through surveillance and research Detection: Conduct studies to assess the relationship between availability of poor-quality medicines and presence of drug-resistant microbes Optimize the use of antimicrobial medicines in human and animal health Prevention: Strengthen and optimize registration and market authorization systems within the national medicines regulatory authority Promote and operationalize principles of reliance on stringent regulatory authorities and regional harmonization Ensure sufficient WHO prequalified sources of medicines Ensure compliance with current good manufacturing practices Ensure good supply chain practices including proper dispensing Procure medicines from WHO prequalified sources Detection: Monitor antimicrobial quality through strategic and risk-based post-marketing surveillance programmes Strengthen national quality control laboratories to comply with ISO 170125 or WHO prequalification standards Ensure routine inspection of products imported and utilize appropriate screening technologies Response: Use data on medicines quality to inform and take regulatory action Develop mechanism(s) for communicating notices of poor-quality antimicrobials with relevant stakeholders ISO: International Organization for Standardization; WHO: World Health Organization. Source: The World Health Organization’s global action plan on antimicrobial resistance, 2015. 1 While gaps in antimicrobial resistance surveillance are well-recognized, efforts to strengthen surveillance are often focused on building capacity of microbiology or clinical laboratories and omit efforts to address quality surveillance. However, strengthening quality assurance and regulatory systems, particularly implementing risk-based post-marketing quality surveillance and supporting national quality control laboratories to accurately and reliably verify the quality of antimicrobials, can reinforce surveillance efforts. Ensuring that a quality surveillance system that provides timely and reliable data on drug quality is part of the comprehensive infrastructure for antimicrobial resistance surveillance should be a public health imperative. These systems should work together, especially since product quality issues can signal the risk of potential development of antimicrobial resistance and vice versa. The Promoting the Quality of Medicines programme, for example, has been working since 2009 to strengthen medicines quality surveillance systems in low- and middle-income countries. This programme has supported regulatory authorities in identifying the presence of poor-quality medicines and taking more than 330 evidence-based enforcement actions, including the recall of products. Data from these quality surveillance activities feed the open access Medicines Quality database, which houses nearly 15 000 medicine-quality test results. These medicines are mostly antimicrobial products from 200 sentinel sites across Africa, Asia and Latin America. This database along with other initiatives, including WHO’s Global Surveillance and Rapid Alert systems, are the bulk of the openly available data on product quality. These complementary efforts need continued investments and ongoing harmonization to collect data that will be important in continuing to assess and monitor antimicrobial quality. Ensuring that procured medicines meet international quality standards, such as WHO prequalification, is another critical measure that can prevent poor-quality antimicrobials from reaching patients. In addition to procuring from WHO-prequalified sources, working with manufacturers to improve compliance with good manufacturing practices encourages the continuous and reliable availability of quality-assured antimicrobials. This approach has enabled critical antibiotics to be produced, including those necessary for the treatment of tuberculosis and maternal and child health conditions. In particular, the Promoting the Quality of Medicines’ support to more than 50 manufacturers has resulted in WHO prequalification for critical antituberculosis medicines, including rifampicin, kanamycin and moxifloxacin. Failing to include key quality assurance measures, such as antimicrobial drug quality surveillance, in plans and strategies aimed at combatting antimicrobial resistance risks overlooking a possible contributing factor to resistance. Building quality assurance into the architecture of the response to antimicrobial resistance, including efforts to strengthen surveillance, optimize rational use and improve supply chain and availability, can strengthen and amplify the effect of other containment efforts. Quality-assured medicines must be an essential part of the strategies and plans to address the increase of antimicrobial resistance.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                J Antimicrob Chemother
                J Antimicrob Chemother
                jac
                Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy
                Oxford University Press (UK )
                0305-7453
                1460-2091
                July 2024
                28 May 2024
                28 May 2024
                : 79
                : 7
                : 1619-1627
                Affiliations
                Human and Veterinary Medicines, Tanzania Medicines and Medical Devices Authority (TMDA) , Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
                Human and Veterinary Medicines, Tanzania Medicines and Medical Devices Authority (TMDA) , Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
                Pharmaceutical and Medicinal Chemistry, Institute for Pharmacy and Food Chemistry, Universität Würzburg , 97074 Würzburg, Germany
                Human and Veterinary Medicines, Tanzania Medicines and Medical Devices Authority (TMDA) , Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
                Laboratory Services, Tanzania Medicines and Medical Devices Authority (TMDA) , Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
                Human and Veterinary Medicines, Tanzania Medicines and Medical Devices Authority (TMDA) , Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
                Laboratory Services, Tanzania Medicines and Medical Devices Authority (TMDA) , Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
                Human and Veterinary Medicines, Tanzania Medicines and Medical Devices Authority (TMDA) , Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
                Laboratory Services, Tanzania Medicines and Medical Devices Authority (TMDA) , Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
                Human and Veterinary Medicines, Tanzania Medicines and Medical Devices Authority (TMDA) , Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
                Laboratory Services, Tanzania Medicines and Medical Devices Authority (TMDA) , Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
                Human and Veterinary Medicines, Tanzania Medicines and Medical Devices Authority (TMDA) , Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
                Laboratory Services, Tanzania Medicines and Medical Devices Authority (TMDA) , Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
                Human and Veterinary Medicines, Tanzania Medicines and Medical Devices Authority (TMDA) , Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
                Laboratory Services, Tanzania Medicines and Medical Devices Authority (TMDA) , Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
                Pharm R&D Lab, School of Pharmacy, Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences , P.O. Box 65545, 11103, Upanga West, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
                Pharmaceutical and Medicinal Chemistry, Institute for Pharmacy and Food Chemistry, Universität Würzburg , 97074 Würzburg, Germany
                Author notes
                Corresponding author. E-mail: ulrike.holzgrabe@ 123456uni-wuerzburg.de
                Twitter: @eliangiringa1
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6008-3539
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0364-7278
                Article
                dkae155
                10.1093/jac/dkae155
                11215545
                38804149
                8e1faea2-4cf3-429d-807d-c2185ad4b950
                © The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of British Society for Antimicrobial Chemotherapy.

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License ( https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact reprints@oup.com for reprints and translation rights for reprints. All other permissions can be obtained through our RightsLink service via the Permissions link on the article page on our site—for further information please contact journals.permissions@oup.com.

                History
                : 10 January 2024
                : 01 May 2024
                Page count
                Pages: 9
                Funding
                Funded by: Tanzania Medicines and Medical Devices Authority;
                Categories
                Original Research
                AcademicSubjects/MED00740
                AcademicSubjects/MED00290
                AcademicSubjects/MED00230

                Oncology & Radiotherapy
                Oncology & Radiotherapy

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