HomeNewsEconomyPolicySC asks govt expert body to review banned FDC drugs before taking further action

SC asks govt expert body to review banned FDC drugs before taking further action

The recommendations of the DTAB or its expert sub-committee would have to be made to the Central Government within six months, after which the government will act further if and where necessary.

December 14, 2017 / 20:39 IST
Story continues below Advertisement

Viswanath Pilla Moneycontrol News
The Supreme Court on Thursday referred 344 fixed combination drugs, also called FDCs, to the government's Drugs Technical Advisory Board (DTAB) for a fresh review of their safety, efficacy and therapeutic justification before recommending an action.

The recommendations of the DTAB or its expert sub-committee would have to be made to the Central Government within six months, after which the government will act further if and where necessary. The Supreme Court order gives temporary relief to pharmaceutical companies, but the possibility of a ban is still in the air.

The apex Court also clarified that for the exercise of powers under Section 26 (A) of the Drugs and Cosmetics Act, the DTAB need not be mandatorily consulted by the Government in order to be convinced of reasons for banning a medicine. The court remarked that the Government could be justified in declaring a ban if it finds that the drug has been banned in other countries.

Story continues below Advertisement

The Delhi high court in December 2016 had set aside a government notification that banned 344 FDC drugs, made by combining two or more drugs into a single dose, on the grounds that the statutory Drugs Technical Advisory Board (DTAB) had not been consulted by the Government.

The pharmaceutical companies represented by eminent lawyers such as P Chidambaram, Kapil Sibal and Gopal Subramaniam argued before the court that there were certain perversities and anomalies in the Professor  Kokate Committee Report that found these drugs to be “irrational” and “unsafe”, based on which the government banned them.