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Quality of anti-malarials collected in the private and informal sectors in Guyana and Suriname

BACKGROUND: Despite a significant reduction in the number of malaria cases in Guyana and Suriname, this disease remains a major problem in the interior of both countries, especially in areas with gold mining and logging operations, where malaria is endemic. National malaria control programmes in the...

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Autores principales: Evans, Lawrence, Coignez, Veerle, Barojas, Adrian, Bempong, Daniel, Bradby, Sanford, Dijiba, Yanga, James, Makeida, Bretas, Gustavo, Adhin, Malti, Ceron, Nicolas, Hinds-Semple, Alison, Chibwe, Kennedy, Lukulay, Patrick, Pribluda, Victor
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3433384/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22704709
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-11-203
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author Evans, Lawrence
Coignez, Veerle
Barojas, Adrian
Bempong, Daniel
Bradby, Sanford
Dijiba, Yanga
James, Makeida
Bretas, Gustavo
Adhin, Malti
Ceron, Nicolas
Hinds-Semple, Alison
Chibwe, Kennedy
Lukulay, Patrick
Pribluda, Victor
author_facet Evans, Lawrence
Coignez, Veerle
Barojas, Adrian
Bempong, Daniel
Bradby, Sanford
Dijiba, Yanga
James, Makeida
Bretas, Gustavo
Adhin, Malti
Ceron, Nicolas
Hinds-Semple, Alison
Chibwe, Kennedy
Lukulay, Patrick
Pribluda, Victor
author_sort Evans, Lawrence
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Despite a significant reduction in the number of malaria cases in Guyana and Suriname, this disease remains a major problem in the interior of both countries, especially in areas with gold mining and logging operations, where malaria is endemic. National malaria control programmes in these countries provide treatment to patients with medicines that are procured and distributed through regulated processes in the public sector. However, availability to medicines in licensed facilities (private sector) and unlicensed facilities (informal sector) is common, posing the risk of access to and use of non-recommended treatments and/or poor quality products. METHODS: To assess the quality of circulating anti-malarial medicines, samples were purchased in the private and informal sectors of Guyana and Suriname in 2009. The sampling sites were selected based on epidemiological data and/or distance from health facilities. Samples were analysed for identity, content, dissolution or disintegration, impurities, and uniformity of dosage units or weight variation according to manufacturer, pharmacopeial, or other validated method. RESULTS: Quality issues were observed in 45 of 77 (58%) anti-malarial medicines sampled in Guyana of which 30 failed visual & physical inspection and 18 failed quality control tests. The proportion of monotherapy and ACT medicines failing quality control tests was 43% (13/30) and 11% (5/47) respectively. A higher proportion of medicines sampled from the private sector 34% (11/32) failed quality control tests versus 16% (7/45) in the informal sector. In Suriname, 58 medicines were sampled, of which 50 (86%) were Artecom®, the fixed-dose combination of piperaquine-dihydroartemisinin-trimethoprim co-blistered with a primaquine phosphate tablet. All Artecom samples were found to lack a label claim for primaquine, thus failing visual and physical inspection. CONCLUSIONS: The findings of the studies in both countries point to significant problems with the quality of anti-malarial medicines available in private and informal sector facilities as well as the availability of therapy not compliant with national treatment guidelines. They also stress the need to strengthen regulatory control efforts on the availability of anti-malarial medicines in these sectors and in endemic areas.
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spelling pubmed-34333842012-09-05 Quality of anti-malarials collected in the private and informal sectors in Guyana and Suriname Evans, Lawrence Coignez, Veerle Barojas, Adrian Bempong, Daniel Bradby, Sanford Dijiba, Yanga James, Makeida Bretas, Gustavo Adhin, Malti Ceron, Nicolas Hinds-Semple, Alison Chibwe, Kennedy Lukulay, Patrick Pribluda, Victor Malar J Research BACKGROUND: Despite a significant reduction in the number of malaria cases in Guyana and Suriname, this disease remains a major problem in the interior of both countries, especially in areas with gold mining and logging operations, where malaria is endemic. National malaria control programmes in these countries provide treatment to patients with medicines that are procured and distributed through regulated processes in the public sector. However, availability to medicines in licensed facilities (private sector) and unlicensed facilities (informal sector) is common, posing the risk of access to and use of non-recommended treatments and/or poor quality products. METHODS: To assess the quality of circulating anti-malarial medicines, samples were purchased in the private and informal sectors of Guyana and Suriname in 2009. The sampling sites were selected based on epidemiological data and/or distance from health facilities. Samples were analysed for identity, content, dissolution or disintegration, impurities, and uniformity of dosage units or weight variation according to manufacturer, pharmacopeial, or other validated method. RESULTS: Quality issues were observed in 45 of 77 (58%) anti-malarial medicines sampled in Guyana of which 30 failed visual & physical inspection and 18 failed quality control tests. The proportion of monotherapy and ACT medicines failing quality control tests was 43% (13/30) and 11% (5/47) respectively. A higher proportion of medicines sampled from the private sector 34% (11/32) failed quality control tests versus 16% (7/45) in the informal sector. In Suriname, 58 medicines were sampled, of which 50 (86%) were Artecom®, the fixed-dose combination of piperaquine-dihydroartemisinin-trimethoprim co-blistered with a primaquine phosphate tablet. All Artecom samples were found to lack a label claim for primaquine, thus failing visual and physical inspection. CONCLUSIONS: The findings of the studies in both countries point to significant problems with the quality of anti-malarial medicines available in private and informal sector facilities as well as the availability of therapy not compliant with national treatment guidelines. They also stress the need to strengthen regulatory control efforts on the availability of anti-malarial medicines in these sectors and in endemic areas. BioMed Central 2012-06-15 /pmc/articles/PMC3433384/ /pubmed/22704709 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-11-203 Text en Copyright ©2012 Evans 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
Evans, Lawrence
Coignez, Veerle
Barojas, Adrian
Bempong, Daniel
Bradby, Sanford
Dijiba, Yanga
James, Makeida
Bretas, Gustavo
Adhin, Malti
Ceron, Nicolas
Hinds-Semple, Alison
Chibwe, Kennedy
Lukulay, Patrick
Pribluda, Victor
Quality of anti-malarials collected in the private and informal sectors in Guyana and Suriname
title Quality of anti-malarials collected in the private and informal sectors in Guyana and Suriname
title_full Quality of anti-malarials collected in the private and informal sectors in Guyana and Suriname
title_fullStr Quality of anti-malarials collected in the private and informal sectors in Guyana and Suriname
title_full_unstemmed Quality of anti-malarials collected in the private and informal sectors in Guyana and Suriname
title_short Quality of anti-malarials collected in the private and informal sectors in Guyana and Suriname
title_sort quality of anti-malarials collected in the private and informal sectors in guyana and suriname
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3433384/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22704709
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-11-203
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