India’s Top-Selling Diabetes Drugs Backed up by Inadequate Clinical Data: Study

 

Over 60 million people in India have been diagnosed with type II diabetes mellitus but the data behind the five most popular drugs has been found to be lacking.

A metformin tablet. Source: YouTube

A new study has found that the clinical trial evidence for five of the most popular diabetes drug combinations in India has been inadequate.

The study has been published in the British Medical Journal‘s ‘Global Health’ section. It examines the efficacy and safety of five of the most used metformin fixed-dose combinations (FDC) in India, popularly administered for adults with type II diabetes mellitus. Metformin is a first-line treatment for diabetes.

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Over 60 million people in India have been diagnosed with type 2 diabetes mellitus.

“Our examination exposes serious deficiencies in the evidence base for metformin FDCs for type 2 diabetes and raises questions about the role of multi-national companies in manufacturing these for sale and use,” the paper said.

The authors evaluated published and unpublished clinical trial data for the five top-selling FDCs and found that none of them provided robust evidence on safety and efficacy.

“The availability of irrational or inadequately tested medicines puts the safety of the public at risk,” the authors also added. “It is important to ensure that those medicines that are available on the market have been approved after examination for safety and efficacy through the implementation of appropriately designed and analysed clinical trials.”

Their study also references the work of the Indian parliament, which has reviewed the issue of irrational drug combinations in India.


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