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Implementation of basic quality control tests for malaria medicines in Amazon Basin countries: results for the 2005–2010 period

BACKGROUND: Ensuring the quality of malaria medicines is crucial in working toward malaria control and eventual elimination. Unlike other validated tests that can assess all critical quality attributes, which is the standard for determining the quality of medicines, basic tests are significantly les...

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Autores principales: Pribluda, Victor S, Barojas, Adrian, Añez, Arletta, López, Cecilia G, Figueroa, Ruth, Herrera, Roxana, Nakao, Gladys, Nogueira, Fernando HA, Pianetti, Gerson A, Povoa, Marinete M, Viana, Giselle MR, Gomes, Margarete S Mendonça, Escobar, Jose P, Sierra, Olga L Muñoz, Norena, Susana P Rendon, Veloz, Raúl, Bravo, Marcy Silva, Aldás, Martha R, HindsSemple, Alison, Collins, Marilyn, Ceron, Nicolas, Krishnalall, Karanchand, Adhin, Malti, Bretas, Gustavo, Hernandez, Nelly, Mendoza, Marjorie, Smine, Abdelkrim, Chibwe, Kennedy, Lukulay, Patrick, Evans, Lawrence
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3433375/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22704680
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-11-202
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author Pribluda, Victor S
Barojas, Adrian
Añez, Arletta
López, Cecilia G
Figueroa, Ruth
Herrera, Roxana
Nakao, Gladys
Nogueira, Fernando HA
Pianetti, Gerson A
Povoa, Marinete M
Viana, Giselle MR
Gomes, Margarete S Mendonça
Escobar, Jose P
Sierra, Olga L Muñoz
Norena, Susana P Rendon
Veloz, Raúl
Bravo, Marcy Silva
Aldás, Martha R
HindsSemple, Alison
Collins, Marilyn
Ceron, Nicolas
Krishnalall, Karanchand
Adhin, Malti
Bretas, Gustavo
Hernandez, Nelly
Mendoza, Marjorie
Smine, Abdelkrim
Chibwe, Kennedy
Lukulay, Patrick
Evans, Lawrence
author_facet Pribluda, Victor S
Barojas, Adrian
Añez, Arletta
López, Cecilia G
Figueroa, Ruth
Herrera, Roxana
Nakao, Gladys
Nogueira, Fernando HA
Pianetti, Gerson A
Povoa, Marinete M
Viana, Giselle MR
Gomes, Margarete S Mendonça
Escobar, Jose P
Sierra, Olga L Muñoz
Norena, Susana P Rendon
Veloz, Raúl
Bravo, Marcy Silva
Aldás, Martha R
HindsSemple, Alison
Collins, Marilyn
Ceron, Nicolas
Krishnalall, Karanchand
Adhin, Malti
Bretas, Gustavo
Hernandez, Nelly
Mendoza, Marjorie
Smine, Abdelkrim
Chibwe, Kennedy
Lukulay, Patrick
Evans, Lawrence
author_sort Pribluda, Victor S
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Ensuring the quality of malaria medicines is crucial in working toward malaria control and eventual elimination. Unlike other validated tests that can assess all critical quality attributes, which is the standard for determining the quality of medicines, basic tests are significantly less expensive, faster, and require less skilled labour; yet, these tests provide reproducible data and information on several critical quality attributes, such as identity, purity, content, and disintegration. Visual and physical inspection also provides valuable information about the manufacturing and the labelling of medicines, and in many cases this inspection is sufficient to detect counterfeit medicines. The Promoting the Quality of Medicines (PQM) programme has provided technical assistance to Amazon Malaria Initiative (AMI) countries to implement the use of basic tests as a key screening mechanism to assess the quality of malaria medicines available to patients in decentralized regions. METHODS: Trained personnel from the National Malaria Control Programmes (NMCPs), often in collaboration with country’s Official Medicine Control Laboratory (OMCL), developed country- specific protocols that encompassed sampling methods, sample analysis, and data reporting. Sampling sites were selected based on malaria burden, accessibility, and geographical location. Convenience sampling was performed and countries were recommended to store the sampled medicines under conditions that did not compromise their quality. Basic analytical tests, such as disintegration and thin layer chromatography (TLC), were performed utilizing a portable mini-laboratory. RESULTS: Results were originally presented at regional meetings in a non-standardized format that lacked relevant medicines information. However, since 2008 information has been submitted utilizing a template specifically developed by PQM for that purpose. From 2005 to 2010, the quality of 1,663 malaria medicines from seven AMI countries was evaluated, mostly collected from the public sector, 1,445/1,663 (86.9%). Results indicate that 193/1,663 (11.6%) were found not to meet quality specifications. Most failures were reported during visual and physical inspection, 142/1663 (8.5%), and most of these were due to expired medicines, 118/142 (83.1%). Samples failing TLC accounted for 27/1,663 (1.6%) and those failing disintegration accounted for 24/1,663 (1.4%). Medicines quality failures decreased significantly during the last two years. CONCLUSIONS: Basic tests revealed that the quality of medicines in the public sector improved over the years, since the implementation of this type of quality monitoring programme in 2005. However, the lack of consistent confirmatory tests in the quality control (QC) laboratory, utilizing methods that can also evaluate additional quality attributes, could still mask quality issues. In the future, AMI countries should improve coordination with their health authorities and their QC lab consistently, to provide a more complete picture of malaria medicines quality and support the implementation of corrective actions. Facilities in the private and informal sectors also should be included when these sectors constitute an important source of medicines used by malaria patients.
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spelling pubmed-34333752012-09-05 Implementation of basic quality control tests for malaria medicines in Amazon Basin countries: results for the 2005–2010 period Pribluda, Victor S Barojas, Adrian Añez, Arletta López, Cecilia G Figueroa, Ruth Herrera, Roxana Nakao, Gladys Nogueira, Fernando HA Pianetti, Gerson A Povoa, Marinete M Viana, Giselle MR Gomes, Margarete S Mendonça Escobar, Jose P Sierra, Olga L Muñoz Norena, Susana P Rendon Veloz, Raúl Bravo, Marcy Silva Aldás, Martha R HindsSemple, Alison Collins, Marilyn Ceron, Nicolas Krishnalall, Karanchand Adhin, Malti Bretas, Gustavo Hernandez, Nelly Mendoza, Marjorie Smine, Abdelkrim Chibwe, Kennedy Lukulay, Patrick Evans, Lawrence Malar J Research BACKGROUND: Ensuring the quality of malaria medicines is crucial in working toward malaria control and eventual elimination. Unlike other validated tests that can assess all critical quality attributes, which is the standard for determining the quality of medicines, basic tests are significantly less expensive, faster, and require less skilled labour; yet, these tests provide reproducible data and information on several critical quality attributes, such as identity, purity, content, and disintegration. Visual and physical inspection also provides valuable information about the manufacturing and the labelling of medicines, and in many cases this inspection is sufficient to detect counterfeit medicines. The Promoting the Quality of Medicines (PQM) programme has provided technical assistance to Amazon Malaria Initiative (AMI) countries to implement the use of basic tests as a key screening mechanism to assess the quality of malaria medicines available to patients in decentralized regions. METHODS: Trained personnel from the National Malaria Control Programmes (NMCPs), often in collaboration with country’s Official Medicine Control Laboratory (OMCL), developed country- specific protocols that encompassed sampling methods, sample analysis, and data reporting. Sampling sites were selected based on malaria burden, accessibility, and geographical location. Convenience sampling was performed and countries were recommended to store the sampled medicines under conditions that did not compromise their quality. Basic analytical tests, such as disintegration and thin layer chromatography (TLC), were performed utilizing a portable mini-laboratory. RESULTS: Results were originally presented at regional meetings in a non-standardized format that lacked relevant medicines information. However, since 2008 information has been submitted utilizing a template specifically developed by PQM for that purpose. From 2005 to 2010, the quality of 1,663 malaria medicines from seven AMI countries was evaluated, mostly collected from the public sector, 1,445/1,663 (86.9%). Results indicate that 193/1,663 (11.6%) were found not to meet quality specifications. Most failures were reported during visual and physical inspection, 142/1663 (8.5%), and most of these were due to expired medicines, 118/142 (83.1%). Samples failing TLC accounted for 27/1,663 (1.6%) and those failing disintegration accounted for 24/1,663 (1.4%). Medicines quality failures decreased significantly during the last two years. CONCLUSIONS: Basic tests revealed that the quality of medicines in the public sector improved over the years, since the implementation of this type of quality monitoring programme in 2005. However, the lack of consistent confirmatory tests in the quality control (QC) laboratory, utilizing methods that can also evaluate additional quality attributes, could still mask quality issues. In the future, AMI countries should improve coordination with their health authorities and their QC lab consistently, to provide a more complete picture of malaria medicines quality and support the implementation of corrective actions. Facilities in the private and informal sectors also should be included when these sectors constitute an important source of medicines used by malaria patients. BioMed Central 2012-06-15 /pmc/articles/PMC3433375/ /pubmed/22704680 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-11-202 Text en Copyright ©2012 Pribluda et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Pribluda, Victor S
Barojas, Adrian
Añez, Arletta
López, Cecilia G
Figueroa, Ruth
Herrera, Roxana
Nakao, Gladys
Nogueira, Fernando HA
Pianetti, Gerson A
Povoa, Marinete M
Viana, Giselle MR
Gomes, Margarete S Mendonça
Escobar, Jose P
Sierra, Olga L Muñoz
Norena, Susana P Rendon
Veloz, Raúl
Bravo, Marcy Silva
Aldás, Martha R
HindsSemple, Alison
Collins, Marilyn
Ceron, Nicolas
Krishnalall, Karanchand
Adhin, Malti
Bretas, Gustavo
Hernandez, Nelly
Mendoza, Marjorie
Smine, Abdelkrim
Chibwe, Kennedy
Lukulay, Patrick
Evans, Lawrence
Implementation of basic quality control tests for malaria medicines in Amazon Basin countries: results for the 2005–2010 period
title Implementation of basic quality control tests for malaria medicines in Amazon Basin countries: results for the 2005–2010 period
title_full Implementation of basic quality control tests for malaria medicines in Amazon Basin countries: results for the 2005–2010 period
title_fullStr Implementation of basic quality control tests for malaria medicines in Amazon Basin countries: results for the 2005–2010 period
title_full_unstemmed Implementation of basic quality control tests for malaria medicines in Amazon Basin countries: results for the 2005–2010 period
title_short Implementation of basic quality control tests for malaria medicines in Amazon Basin countries: results for the 2005–2010 period
title_sort implementation of basic quality control tests for malaria medicines in amazon basin countries: results for the 2005–2010 period
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3433375/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22704680
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-11-202
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