| Literature DB >> 27998293 |
Anthony Pezzola1, Cassandra M Sweet2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This paper has set out to map the state of pharmaceutical regulation in the developing world through the construction of cross-national indices drawing from World Health Organization data. The last two decades have been characterized by deep changes for the pharmaceutical sector, including the complete transformation of intellectual property systems at the behest of the World Trade Organization and the consolidation of global active ingredient suppliers in China and India. Although the rules for ownership of medicine have been set and globally implemented, we know surprisingly little about how the standards for market entrance and regulation of pharmaceutical products have changed at the national level. How standardized are national pharmaceutical market systems? Do we find homogeneity or variation across the developing world? Are their patterns for understanding why some countries have moved closer to one global norm for pharmaceutical regulation and others have developed hybrid models for oversight of this sector? Access to medicine is a core tool in public health. This paper gauges the levels of standards in public and private generics markets for developing countries building on national-level pharmaceutical market surveys for 78 countries to offer three indicators of market oversight: State Regulatory Infrastructure, Monitoring the Private Market and Public Quality Control. Identifying the different variables that affect a state's institutional capacity and current standard level offers new insights to the state of pharmaceuticals in the developing world. It is notable that there are very few (none at the time of this paper) studies that map out the new global terrain for pharmaceutical regulation in the post-TRIPS context.Entities:
Keywords: Access to medicine; Developing countries; Pharmaceuticals; Regulation; World Health Organization
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27998293 PMCID: PMC5175325 DOI: 10.1186/s12992-016-0208-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Global Health ISSN: 1744-8603 Impact factor: 4.185
Composition of State Regulatory Infrastructure
| 3.01.04 | Equal to one if a national medicines policy official document exists. |
| 3.01.12 | Equal to one if pharmaceutical policy implementation is being regularly monitored/assessed. |
| 3.01.14 | Equal to one if a policy is in place to manage and sanction conflict of interest issues in pharmaceutical affairs. |
| 3.01.16 | Equal to one if there a whistle-blowing mechanism allowing individuals to raise a concern about wrongdoing occurring in the pharmaceutical sector of your country. |
| 5.01.01 | Equal to one if there are legal provisions establishing the powers and responsibilities of the Medicines Regulatory Authority (MRA). |
| 5.01.02 | Equal to one if there is a MRA. |
| 5.01.04.02 | Equal to one if the MRA is a semi autonomous agency. |
| 5.01.10 | Equal to one if an assessment of the medicines regulatory system has been conducted during the five years before the survey. |
| 5.01.11 | Equal to one if the MRA gets funds from regular budget of the government. |
| 5.01.15 | Equal to one if the MRA uses a computerized information management system to store and retrieve information on registration, inspections, etc. |
| 5.02.15S | Equal to one if legal provisions require declaration of potential conflict of interests for the experts involved in the assessment and decision-making for registration. |
| 5.05.03 | Equal to one if Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP) requirements are published by the government. |
| 5.05.07 | Equal to one if National Good Distribution Practice requirements are published by the government |
| 5.05.11 | Equal to one if National Good Pharmacy Practice Guidelines are published by the government |
Composition of Monitoring the Private Market
| Legal Framework | |
| 5.02.08 | Equal to one if medicines registration always includes the INN (International Nonproprietary Names). |
| 5.02.12S | Equal to one if legal provisions require publication of a Summary of Product Characteristics (SPCs) of the medicines registered. |
| 5.05.01 | Equal to one if legal provisions exist requiring manufacturers to be licensed |
| 5.05.02 | Equal to one if legal provisions exist requiring both domestic and international manufacturers to comply with Good manufacturing Practices (GMP) |
| 5.05.05 | Equal to one if legal provisions exist requiring wholesalers and distributors to be licensed |
| 5.05.06 | Equal to one if legal provisions exist requiring wholesalers and distributors to comply with Good Distributing Practices |
| 5.05.08 | Equal to one if legal provisions exist requiring pharmacists to be registered |
| 5.05.09 | Equal to one if legal provisions exists requiring private pharmacies to be licensed. |
| 5.07.01 | Equal to one if legal provisions exist to control the promotion and/or advertising of prescription medicines |
| Inspection of Supply Chain and Distributiona | |
| 5.03.05.01 | Equal to one if local manufactures are inspected for GMP compliance. |
| 5.03.05.02 | Equal to one if private wholesalers are inspected. |
| 5.03.05.03 | Equal to one if retail distributors are inspected- |
| 5.03.05.05 | Equal to one if pharmacies and dispensing points of health facilities are inspected. |
| Inspections | Equal to one if manufactures, retail distributors, and pharmacies and dispensing points of health facilities are inspected at least every three years. |
| Equal to one if either manufactures, retail distributors, or pharmacies and dispensing points of health facilities are inspected at least every year. | |
| 5.04.02 | Equal to one if legal provisions exist allowing the sampling of imported products for testing |
| 5.04.03 | Equal to one if legal provisions exist requiring importation of medicines through authorized ports of entry |
| 5.04.04 | Equal to one if legal provisions exist allowing inspection of imported pharmaceutical products at the authorized ports of entry. |
| 5.05.04 | Equal to one if legal provisions exist requiring importers to be licensed |
| Pharmacovigilance | |
| 5.10.01 | Equal to one if there are legal provision that provides for pharmacovigilance activities as part of the MRA mandate. |
| 5.10.02 | Equal to one if legal provisions exist requiring the Marketing Authorization holder to continuously monitor the safety of their products and report to the MRA |
| 5.10.03 | Equal to one if legal provisions about monitoring Adverse Drug Reactions (ADR) exist in your country |
| 5.10.22S | Equal to one if there training courses in pharmacovigilance. |
| 5.10.05 | Equal to one if an official standardized form for reporting ADRs is used. |
| 5.10.06 | Equal to one if a national ADR database exists. |
| 5.10.10 | Equal to one if there a national ADR or pharmacovigilance advisory committee able to provide technical assistance on causality assessment, risk assessment, risk management, case investigation and, where necessary, crisis management including crisis communication. |
| 5.10.16S | Equal to one if ADR database is computerized. |
aSeveral continuous variables (e.g. How many samples were taken in the last two years) were discarded due to what seemed invalid values
Composition of Public Quality Control
| 5.03.05.04 | Equal to one if public pharmacies and stores are inspected. |
| 5.03.05.05 | Equal to one if pharmacies and dispensing points of health facilities are inspected. |
| 5.05.08 | Equal to one if legal provisions exist requiring pharmacists to be registered. |
| 5.05.10 | Equal to one if legal provision exist requiring public pharmacies to be licensed. |
| 5.06.04.01 | Equal to one if quality monitoring in the public sector exists (routine sampling in pharmacy stores and health facilities). |
| 5.06.04.06 | Equal to one if there is testing of public program products prior to acceptance and/or distribution. |
| 7.01.03 | Equal to one if public sector requests for tender documents are publicly available. |
| 7.01.04 | Equal to one if public sector tender awards are publicly available. |
| 7.01.05 | Equal to one if there is a system to prequalify suppliers. |
| 7.01.07S | Equal to one if there is a written public sector procurement policy. |
| 7.01.10S | Equal to one if a process exists to ensure the quality of products procured. |
| 7.01.11S | Equal to one if a list of samples tested during the procurement process and results of quality testing are available. |
| 7.01.12.01S | Equal to one if tenders are national competitive. |
| 7.01.12.02S | Equal to one if tenders are international competitive tenders. |
| 7.02.03 | Equal to one if there are national guidelines on Good Distribution Practices (GDP) |
| 7.10.10.01S | Equal to one if the quality assurance process includes prequalification of products and suppliers. |
| 7.10.10.02S | Equal to one if explicit criteria and procedures exist for prequalification of suppliers |
| 7.10.10.03S | Equal to one if a list of prequalified suppliers and products is publicly available. |
Posterior density of the measure of Regulatory Infrastructure and Good Practices
| Item discrimination | Item difficulty | |
|---|---|---|
| GMP requirements are published by the government (5.05.03) | 1.89 | 0.08 |
| (0.72) | (0.30) | |
| MRA uses a computerized information management system (5.01.15) | 1.67 | 0.61 |
| (0.60) | (0.30) | |
| Government publishes National Good Pharmacy Practice Guidelines (5.05.11) | 1.50 | −0.84 |
| (0.57) | (0.31) | |
| Government publishes National Good Distribution Practice Guidelines (5.05.07) | 1.23 | −0.76 |
| (0.46) | (0.27) | |
| An MRA exists (5.01.02) | 1.20 | 1.34 |
| (0.42) | (0.32) | |
| Legal provisions establish the power and responsibilities of the MRA (5.01.01) | 1.14 | 1.38 |
| (0.39) | (0.31) | |
| Whistle-blowing mechanism for the pharmaceutical sector (3.01.16) | 0.95 | 0.04 |
| (0.32) | (0.20) | |
| A national medicines policy official document exists (3.01.04) | 0.77 | 0.78 |
| (0.28) | (0.20) | |
| Declaration of potential conflict of interests of experts (5.02.15S) | 0.75 | −0.25 |
| (0.27) | (0.18) | |
| MRA gets funds from regular government budget (5.01.11) | 0.66 | 0.77 |
| (0.26) | (0.20) | |
| Policy exists to manage and sanction conflict of interest (3.01.14) | 0.56 | −0.45 |
| (0.23) | (0.17) | |
| An assessment of the regulatory system was conducted within last five years (5.01.10) | 0.51 | 0.56 |
| (0.23) | (0.17) | |
| Pharmaceutical policy implementation is being regularly monitored (3.01.12) | 0.45 | −0.06 |
| (0.21) | (0.16) | |
|
|
| −0.71 |
|
| (0.17) |
Notes: Entries without parentheses are posterior means and entries with parentheses are posterior standard deviations. The parameters were estimated using the MCMCmixfactanal in the MCMCpack in R3.1.2. Items are ordered by the degree of discrimination. Estimations with a significant portion of their posterior mass to the left of zero are in italic and placed last
Fig. 1Quality of regulatory infrastructure (estimated ϕ)
Posterior density of the measure of Public Quality Control (all countries)
| Item discrimination | Item | |
|---|---|---|
| Prequalification of products and suppliers (7.10.10.01S) | 3.69 | 1.35 |
| (1.05) | (0.59) | |
| Explicit criteria and procedures exist for prequalification of suppliers (7.10.10.02S) | 3.63 | 0.49 |
| (1.05) | (0.51) | |
| Process exists to ensure the quality of products procured (7.01.10S) | 2.56 | 2.87 |
| (0.83) | (0.79) | |
| System to prequalify suppliers (7.01.05) | 1.42 | 0.50 |
| (0.41) | (0.25) | |
| List of prequalified suppliers and products is publicly available (7.01.10.03S) | 1.41 | −0.49 |
| (0.46) | (0.26) | |
| Results of quality testing are available (7.01.11S) | 1.22 | −0.14 |
| (0.36) | (0.22) | |
| Written public sector procurement policy (7.01.07S) | 0.80 | 0.66 |
| (0.26) | (0.19) | |
| Public sector requests for tender are publicly available (7.01.03) | 0.70 | 1.00 |
| (0.26) | (0.21) | |
| Testing of public program products prior to distribution (5.06.04.06) | 0.43 | 0.44 |
| (0.20) | (0.16) | |
|
|
| 1.53 |
|
| (0.24) | |
|
|
| 0.51 |
|
| (0.16) | |
|
|
| 0.75 |
|
| (0.17) | |
|
|
| 0.32 |
|
| (0.15) | |
|
|
| 0.58 |
|
| (0.16) | |
|
|
| 0.50 |
|
| (0.15) | |
|
|
| 0.62 |
|
| (0.16) | |
|
|
| −0.27 |
|
| (0.15) | |
|
|
| 0.26 |
|
| (0.15) |
Notes: Entries without parentheses are posterior means and entries with parentheses are posterior standard deviations. The parameters were estimated using the MCMCmixfactanal in the MCMCpack in R3.1.2. Items are ordered by the degree of discrimination. Estimations with a significant portion of their posterior mass to the left of zero are in italic and placed last
Posterior density of the measure of the regulation and monitoring of the private market model
| Aspect | Annual inspections | Regular inspections | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Item discrimination | Item difficulty | Item discrimination | Item difficulty | ||
| Legal provisions for the promotion of medicines (5.07.01) | LF | 2.21 (0.70) | 2.02 (0.55) | 2.15 (0.68) | 1.98 (0.54) |
| Manufactures required to be licensed (5.05.01) | LF | 2.06 (0.68) | 2.29 (0.59) | 2.05 (0.67) | 2.28 (0.58) |
| Manufactures must comply with GMP (X5.05.02) | LF | 1.99 (0.62) | 1.54 (0.43) | 1.97 (0.61) | 1.53 (0.43) |
| Pharmacovigilance part of MRA mandate (5.10.01) | PV | 1.75 (0.48) | 0.32 (0.28) | 1.75 (0.47) | 0.31 (0.28) |
| Private wholesalers inspected (5.03.05.02) | SC | 1.74 (0.56) | 1.36 (0.39) | 1.81 (0.58) | 1.40 (0.41) |
| Local manufactures inspected for GMP compliance (5.03.05.01) | SC | 1.72 (0.51) | 0.72 (0.31) | 1.77 (0.53) | 0.73 (0.31) |
| Retail distributors inspected (5.03.05.03) | SC | 1.69 (0.54) | 1.36 (0.38) | 1.75 (0.56) | 1.37 (0.40) |
| Legal provisions for ADR (5.10.03) | PV | 1.62 (0.46) | 0.05 (0.26) | 1.58 (0.45) | 0.05 (0.25) |
| Wholesalers and distributors must be licensed (5.05.05) | LF | 1.52 (0.54) | 2.15 (0.50) | 1.50 (0.53) | 2.13 (0.49) |
| Medicines registration always includes the INN (5.02.08) | LF | 1.25 (0.39) | 1.19 (0.29) | 1.20 (0.38) | 1.16 (0.28) |
| Official standardized form for reporting ADRs is used (5.10.05) | PV | 1.17 (0.37) | 1.26 (0.30) | 1.16 (0.36) | 1.26 (0.29) |
| National ADR database exists (5.10.06) | PV | 1.13 (0.31) | 0.07 (0.21) | 1.10 (0.31 | 0.07 (0.21) |
| Marketer monitor safety and report to the MRA (5.10.02) | PV | 1.11 (0.33) | 0.05 (0.21) | 1.09 (0.32) | 0.05 (0.21) |
| National ADR or pharmacovigilance advisory committee (5.10.10) | PV | 1.09 (0.33) | −0.60 (0.22) | 1.10 (0.33) | −0.60 (0.23) |
| Importers required to be licensed (5.05.04) | SC | 1.02 (0.43) | 1.92 (0.39) | 0.98 (0.42) | 1.89 (0.38) |
| Points of dissemination inspected (5.03.05.05) | SC | 0.94 (0.31) | 0.90 (0.23) | 0.97 (0.31) | 0.91 (0.23) |
| Pharmacies are required to be registered (5.05.09) | LF | 0.89 (0.30) | 0.87 (0.23) | 0.88 (0.29) | 0.86 (0.22) |
| ADR database is computerized (5.10.16S) | PV | 0.87 (0.26) | −0.09 (0.19) | 0.87 (0.26) | −0.10 (0.19) |
| Training courses in pharmacovigilance exist (5.10.22S) | PV | 0.85 (0.27) | 0.41 (0.19) | 0.86 (0.27) | 0.41 (0.19) |
| Distributors must comply with GDP (5.05.06) | LF | 0.82 (0.26) | −0.02 (0.18) | 0.80 (0.25) | −0.02 (0.18) |
| Sampling of imported products for testing (5.04.02) | SC | 0.55 (0.23) | 0.64 (0.18) | 0.53 (0.23) | 0.63 (0.18) |
| Publication of SPCs of registered medicines (5.02.12S) | LF | 0.46 (0.21) | −0.07 (0.16) | 0.47 (0.21) | −0.07 (0.16) |
| Regularity of inspections | SC | 0.33 (0.11) | −0.38 (0.16) | 0.63 (0.25) | −0.79 (0.19) |
|
| SC |
| 0.54 (0.17) | 0.41 (0.21) | 0.54 (0.17) |
|
| LF |
| 1.43 (0.22) | 0.14 (0.26) | 1.42 (0.22) |
|
| SC |
| 0.35 (0.15) | 0.12 (0.19) | 0.35 (0.15) |
Notes: Entries without parentheses are posterior means and entries with parentheses are posterior standard deviations. The parameters were estimated using the MCMCmixfactanal in the MCMCpack in R3.1.2. Items are ordered by the degree of discrimination. Estimations with a significant portion of their posterior mass to the left of zero are in italic and placed last. Aspects of monitoring the private market are: Legal Framework (LF), Control and Inspection of the Supply Chain (SC), and Pharmacovigilance (PV)
Fig. 2Relationship between regulatory infrastructure and regulation of the private market
Fig. 3Relationship between regulatory infrastructure and regulation of the public market
Fig. 4Relationship between regulation of the public and private markets