Teva Ships $2mn Hydroxychloroquine from India to the US
After the initial uncertainty over export of hydroxychloroquine from India, a drug used in the fight
against Covid-19, the first consignment of the medicine has reached the United
States.
Israeli drugmaker Teva has exported the drug from its Goa plant (under Watson
Pharma, a company it had acquired). “The company has exported 2.4 million
tablets, and nine metric tonnes of the active
pharmaceutical ingredient (API) used to make the tablet,” Udaya
Bhaskar, Director-General, Pharmaceuticals Export
Promotion Council of India (Pharmexcil), said. Bhaskar said he had spoken to company officials in Goa, who
confirmed that it had reached the US.
The development comes a week after the Centre’s flip-flop
on exporting the drug. Drug companies Ipca, Zydus Cadila and Laurus Labs are also said to be ready to export.
Hydroxychloroquine, used in treating certain types of malaria, rheumatoid
arthritis and lupus, made international headlines after US President Trump
called it a “game changer” and asked India to released stocks of the drug it
had ordered. India had last week ordered a complete stop on export of the drug,
with no exceptions. The situation has since turned around, with the Centre
opening the gates for a dozen-odd APIs, besides permitting limited export of hydroxichloroquine and paracetamol.
The international and domestic surge in demand for hydroxychloroquine comes even as scientific voices call for
its restrained use in healthcare workers handling Covid-19 patients or the
family of the patient. Doctors have been raising concerns on the drug’s impact
on the heart and the eyes. This, even as reports emerge of patients with lupus
finding it difficult to get the drug from their chemist, something the
government denies.
The value of the consignment is approx
USD 2 million.