| Literature DB >> 31791048 |
Onella Charles1, Igho Onakpoya2, Simran Benipal1, Hannah Woods1, Anjli Bali1, Jeffrey K Aronson2, Carl Heneghan2, Nav Persaud1,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Essential medicines lists and related policies are intended to meet the priority health needs of populations and their implementation is associated with more appropriate use of medicines. The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends that countries carefully select the medicines to be included in their national essential medicines lists. Lists that are used to prioritize access to important treatments should not include medicines that have been withdrawn elsewhere because of an unfavourable benefit-to-harm balance; however, countries still list and use medicines that have been withdrawn worldwide. The objective of this study was to determine whether the national essential medicines lists of 137 countries include medicines that have been withdrawn in other countries. METHODS ANDEntities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31791048 PMCID: PMC6887519 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0225429
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Diagram illustrating inclusion of withdrawn medicines identified on an essential medicines list.
The figure shows the process of determining the total number of withdrawn medicines included in this study.
Fig 2Number of withdrawn medicines included in the national essential medicines lists of 137 countries.
The countries that are shaded grey do not have a publically available essential medicines list. Countries are shaded on a color scale where lighter list fewer withdrawn medicines on their essential medicines lists and darker list more.
Fig 3Number of essential medicines lists including withdrawn medicines.
The left side of the Figure shows the number of withdrawn medicines included in a small number of national essential medicines lists (e.g. 22 withdrawn medicines are listed by only one national essential medicines list). The right side of the Figure shows withdrawn medicines listed by many countries (e.g. 1 withdrawn medicine is listed by 121 countries).
Fig 4Number of withdrawn medicines included on national essential medicines lists according to the number of medicines on each essential medicines lists, country sub-region, and national GDP.
The area of the circle represents national GDP (larger circle, larger national GDP), and the color of the circle represents sub-region.
Medicines withdrawn worldwide that are included in one or more national essential medicines lists.
| Withdrawn medicine | Year of withdrawal | Safety concern | National essential medicines lists including withdrawn medicine and year of most recent list update |
|---|---|---|---|
| Astemizole | 1999 | Cardiotoxicity, drug-drug interactions | Slovakia—2012 |
| Chlormezanone | 1996 | Toxic epidermal necrosis | Côte d’Ivoire—2014 |
| Drotrecogin alfa | 2011 | Failure to show benefits | Mexico—2011 |
| Fenfluramine | 1997 | Cardiovascular, pulmonary | Lesotho—2005 |
| Laropiprant | 2013 | Increased serious, but nonfatal adverse effects | Portugal—2011 |
| Nebacumab | 1993 | Accelerated deaths | Bahrain—2015 |
| Nikethamide | 1988 | Neurotoxicity | China—2012 |
| Rofecoxib | 2004 | Increased risk of heart attacks | Syrian Arab Republic—2008 |
| Suprofen | 1986 | Nephrotoxicity | Ethiopia—2014 |
| Terodiline | 1992 | Cardiac arrhythmias | Iraq—2010 |
| Thioridazine | 2005 | Cardiac arrhythmias, QT prolongation | Antigua and Barbuda—2007 Barbados—2011 Belize—2008 Bolivia—2011 Botswana—2012 Bulgaria—2011 Chile—2010 Colombia—2011 Cuba—2012 Dominica—2007 Eritrea—2010 Ethiopia—2014 Grenada—2007 Guyana—2010 Iran (Islamic Republic)—2014 Kiribati—2009 Lesotho—2005 Maldives—2009 Marshall Islands—2007 Montenegro—2011 Mozambique—2017 Namibia—2016 Nepal—2016 Nicaragua—2011 Oman—2009 Peru—2012 Russian Federation—2014 Saint Kitts and Nevis—2007 Saint Lucia—2007 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines—2010 Serbia—2010 Thailand—2013 The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia—2008 Tonga—2007 Trinidad and Tobago—2010 United Republic of Tanzania—2017 Uruguay—2011 Venezuela (Bolivarian Republic)—2004 Viet Nam—2008 |