Now, a low-cost paper card to spot substandard drugs
Washington, August
22:
Scientists
have developed a simple, inexpensive paper-based device which can identify
poor-quality or degraded medications within minutes.
The
developing world is awash in substandard, degraded or falsified medications,
which can either directly harm users or deprive them of needed treatment,
researchers said.
With
internet sales of medications on the rise, people everywhere are increasingly
at risk, they said.
“People
who do not have access to the best-quality medicines also do not have as many
resources to buy the analytical instrumentation to detect the quality
problems,” said Marya Lieberman from University of Notre Dame in the US.
“Instead
of a $30,000 instrument, we have developed a $1 paper card. We designed the
card so it would be as easy and inexpensive to use as possible,” said
Lieberman.
Medications
can be compromised in many different ways.
For
example, they may be bulked up with fillers, or they can degrade because they
are stored improperly, researchers said.
Identifying
poor-quality medications is challenging, as inspectors may not know in advance
what chemical adulterants or degradation products they need to look for, they
said.
Bad-quality
medications may also contain at least some of the active ingredient, so simply
detecting the presence of the real medication is not enough to rule out issues.
Lieberman
and Sarah Bliese from Hamline University in the US developed a card to detect
falsified or degraded antibiotics such as ciprofloxacin or ceftriaxone, both of
which the World Health Organisation lists as “essential.”
To
screen for a variety of potential quality issues, researchers included 12 lanes
separated by wax barriers on the paper device.
Each
lane contained a different set of reagents to detect materials or functional
groups found in active pharmaceutical ingredients, degradation products or
common fillers.
To
run a sample, researchers crushed a pill and rub the resulting powder across
all 12 lanes, and then dipped the bottom of the paper card in water for three
minutes.
Source | Business
Line | 23 August 2016
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