| Literature DB >> 26873700 |
Harparkash Kaur1, Siȃn Clarke2, Mirza Lalani3, Souly Phanouvong4, Philippe Guérin5,6, Andrew McLoughlin7, Benjamin K Wilson8, Michael Deats9, Aline Plançon10, Heidi Hopkins11, Debora Miranda12, David Schellenberg13.
Abstract
This meeting report presents the key findings and discussion points of a 1-day meeting entitled 'Fake anti-malarials: start with the facts' held on 28th May 2015, in Geneva, Switzerland, to disseminate the findings of the artemisinin combination therapy consortium's drug quality programme. The teams purchased over 10,000 samples, using representative sampling approaches, from six malaria endemic countries: Equatorial Guinea (Bioko Island), Cambodia, Ghana, Nigeria, Rwanda and Tanzania. Laboratory analyses of these samples showed that falsified anti-malarials (<8 %) were found in just two of the countries, whilst substandard artemisinin-based combinations were present in all six countries and, artemisinin-based monotherapy tablets are still available in some places despite the fact that the WHO has urged regulatory authorities in malaria-endemic countries to take measures to halt the production and marketing of these oral monotherapies since 2007. This report summarizes the presentations that reviewed the public health impact of falsified and substandard drugs, sampling strategies, techniques for drug quality analysis, approaches to strengthen health systems capacity for the surveillance of drug quality, and the ensuing discussion points from the dissemination meeting.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26873700 PMCID: PMC4752758 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-016-1096-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Comparative strengths and weaknesses of three sampling approaches [18]
| Sampling approach | Strengths | Limitations |
|---|---|---|
| Convenience | Rapid | Sampling depends on collectors choice of outlet (risk of bias) |
| Random | Sampling frame is defined to obtain representative sample from all types of outlets and/or brands | Need to authenticate and update sampling frame increases time and cost of survey |
| Mystery clients | Outlets are unaware of survey so less chance of sample bias | Information on sources of poor quality drugs limited to brand, batch and country of manufacture as stated on packaging |
| Overt | Additional information is collected at minimal additional cost to mystery approach as provider is aware of the aims of the study | Risk of sampling bias in samples collected, if some outlets refuse to sell or samples are deliberately withheld as poor quality is known by the seller |
Numbers of samples analysed and quality of ACT found per country
| Country (date of sampling) | Number of samples | Number of brands | Percent quality assured | Percent falsified | Percent Substandard | Artemisinin monotherapy tablets |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rwanda (2008) | 97 | 1 | 93.8 | Not found | 6.2 | Not found |
| Cambodia (2010) | 291 | 21 | 68.7 | Not found | 31.3 | Found |
| Ghana-Kintampo (2011) | 257 | 31 | 63.0 | Not found | 37.0 | Not found |
| Tanzania (2010) | 1737 | 37 | 88.0 | Not found | 12.0 | Found |
| Tanzania (2011) | 2546 | 46 | 97.8 | Not found | 2.2 | Found |
| Nigeria-Enugu Metropolis (2013) | 3024 | 131 | 92.2 | 1.2 | 6.6 | Found |
| Nigeria-Ilorin city (2013) | 1450 | 77 | 91.5 | 0.8 | 7.7 | Found |
| Equatorial Guinea-Bioko Island (2014) | 677 | 142 | 91.0 | 7.4 | 1.6 | Found |
Fig. 1Diagram of sample flow and corroborative analyses at three independent laboratories