Maharashtra: Mega Scare as 90 Suffer Side Effects of Remdesivir, Brand Suspended
The Mumbai government has recalled doses of Remdesivir manufactured by Hetero Drugs after several patients complained of side effects. (IANS photo)
QUAID NAJMI/IANS
RAIGAD/MUMBAI – Sparking a mega health scare, at least 90 Covid-19 patients in Maharashtra’s Raigad district, who were administered Remdesivir doses of a particular brand, developed severe side effects following which the state government has imposed a temporary suspension on its use here, FDA Minister Rajendra Shingane said.
“The incident took place April 29 in around three hospitals in the district. The patients, who were administered Remdesivir manufactured by the company Hetero Drugs, had complained of side effects,” Shingane told IANS.
The shocking incident came to light when some patients developed chills, drop in blood pressure, fall in SPU count, varying degrees of fever or other health issues in various hospitals.
Releasing a video-statement, Raigad Collector Nidhi Choudhari said that following complaints from patients in different hospitals, the district health authorities acted on them immediately.
“On April 28, we had received around 510 vials of Remdesivir which were distributed among various hospitals for the patients. After the complaints of patients developing several side-effects, we acted immediately and stopped the use of all the doses,” said Choudhari.
“The situation is under control and the condition of all the patients is stable now. There is no cause for worry,” Choudhari assured.
A district official said that out of a particular Hetero batch of its Rendesivir brand ‘Covifor’ injection, 130 patients were given the doses out of which a staggering 90 reported the side effects, shaking the already-stressed local medical authorities.
On learning of the matter, the FDA authorities in Mumbai immediately suspended the administration of Covifor and recalled its batches till the full details of the incident are examined by the concerned medical authorities.
Choudhari said that district authorities also ordered all medicos not to administer the particular injection to any patient, and to withdraw the remaining stocks of the injection from all the hospitals they were distributed to.0
She reiterated the center’s and WHO’s past assertions that Remdesivir is “not a life-saver drug” as is the general perception and it is used in a specific manner during the Covid-19 treatment protocols.
While local activists like Vaishali Patil demanded a statement from the government, other medical experts opined that the incident poses a question mark on the alleged ‘miracle-cure reputation’ of Remdesivir injections, which are in huge demand all over India with people even shelling out huge amounts to procure it from the black market.
Earlier this month, following a plea by a Mumbai barrister, Vinod Tiwari, the center had brought all the brands of Remdesivir under Drug Price Control Order which slashed the MRP of different brands averaging to Rs. 2,450 per injection.
In his petition to the center, Tiwari had alleged a massive scam of over Rs. 25,000-crore through haphazard MRPs being charged by the medical distribution chain, exploiting lakhs of desperate customers anxious to get a Remdesivir dose, hoarding by unscrupulous elements to create an artificial shortage and demanded a probe by the Central Vigilance Commission.