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In 2008, I got an unusual phone call
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from a guy named Joe Graedon.
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Joe said he was getting flooded
with complaints from patients
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who had recently been switched
to generic drugs.
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Joe was a trained pharmacologist
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and cohost of a radio show on NPR.
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Patient after patient said their generics
were causing unwelcome side effects
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or even relapses.
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Joe believed the patients' claims.
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But when he reported
these complaints to the FDA,
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officials there argued,
"It was probably psychosomatic.
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Patients are upset by pills
that look different from their old ones."
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Joe didn't buy it.
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He wanted someone
with investigative firepower
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to dig into this,
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and since I was
an investigative journalist,
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he called me.
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And then he posed a question
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that I couldn't get out of my head:
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"Katherine, what is wrong with the drugs?"
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I spent the next 10 years
trying to track down the answer.
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Our health care system relies on generics.
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My family does, too.
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But a decade of interviews,
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meetings with whistleblowers,
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on-the-ground reporting
across four continents
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and thousands of confidential files --
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from the FDA,
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from generic drug companies
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and from the courts --
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all pointed me in the same direction:
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a large number of generic
drug manufacturers
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in certain overseas countries
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are passing off substandard drugs
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as legitimate generics
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for profit.
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They are deliberately flouting
FDA regulations and standards.
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Basically, they are committing fraud.
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In the process, they are risking
the health of patients around the world.
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They may even be costing patient lives.
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One leading company in India
has already shut down
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because of this activity.
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I wanted to know,
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was that company an outlier
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or the tip of the iceberg?
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What I uncovered is disquieting,
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and anyone who takes generic drugs
has the right to be deeply concerned.
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If you're skeptical about any of this,
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that's fair.
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I saw generics as one of the world's
great public health innovations,
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a giant win for patients worldwide.
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Ninety percent of our drugs
today are generic.
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I knew generic HIV/AIDS medicine
had saved many lives in Africa.
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Here at home,
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programs from Medicare to Medicaid
and the Affordable Care Act
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depended on them.
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In an overpriced drug market,
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generics were the heroic underdog.
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But my biggest assumption was based
on the FDA's reassurance
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that properly regulated generic drugs
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are not only safe and effective,
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but bioequivalent,
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interchangeable with the brand
and with one another.
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Well, that's true --
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if companies follow the rules on paper.
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But inside far-flung drug plants,
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I uncovered a different,
unwritten set of rules.
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I started my investigation
by focusing on the regulatory framework.
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Right away, one fact surprised me:
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the FDA does not vet manufacturer
applications by testing the drugs.
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Instead, it reviews company data.
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As the FDA's generic drugs director
actually told me,
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"The approval system requires
the ethical behavior of the applicant.
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Otherwise, the whole house
of cards will fall down."
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Really?
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It's the honor system?
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(Laughter)
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After nine months of digging,
I published my first article on generics.
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I wrote about patients
who'd been switched to generic drugs
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and suffered medical setbacks.
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I quoted doctors
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who questioned whether generics
really were bioequivalent to the brand.
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A month later, I got an anonymous email
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from someone calling himself
"Four Dollar Refill."
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(Laughter)
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Four dollars is what you'd pay
to fill a generic prescription at Walmart.
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Four Dollar Refill worked inside
the generic drug industry.
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He said if I really wanted
to uncover the problem,
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I'd better go look where the majority
of our generic drugs are made:
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in India and China.
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Four Dollar Refill was right;
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80 percent of the plants
making the active ingredient
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for all our drugs, brand or generic,
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are overseas,
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mostly in China and India.
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Any generic drug company
anywhere in the world
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wanting approval to sell
its drugs into our market
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has to follow elaborate rules
known as "Good Manufacturing Practices."
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I decided to learn every detail
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of how to manufacture
a legitimate generic drug.
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At a top New Jersey lab,
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I watched as technicians ran tests
on specialized machines
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and used flasks that mimic
stomach conditions
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to measure drug dissolution.
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But one remarkable fact jumped out.
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The lab banned Wite-Out --
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correction fluid --
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across its facility.
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Under FDA rules, data serves
as the cornerstone of quality.
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It has to be gathered
at each manufacturing step,
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preserved
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and shared with regulators.
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Wite-Out was high-risk.
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It invited tampering.
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It was clear that for the FDA's
regulatory regime to succeed,
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any company applying for approval
had to be ethical,
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and its data had to be unaltered.
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But what if neither was true?
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What if the applicant was not ethical?
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What if the data was not pristine?
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I started to hear about a company
in India called Ranbaxy,
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India's largest drug company,
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one of its first successful multinationals
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and one of the fastest-growing
generic suppliers to the US market.
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A whistleblower was supplying
internal Ranbaxy documents to the FDA.
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I got copies.
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Deciphering the company's charts,
graphs and numbers
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unveiled a shocking swindle.
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They substituted unapproved,
lower-purity ingredients.
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They invented documents
like standard operating procedures,
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steaming them overnight
in a sauna-like room
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to make them look old.
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They conjured up three-, six-,
nine- and 18-month stability studies,
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all generated on the same day.
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Gradually, I was able to unearth the story
behind this regulatory nightmare.
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In 2004, Ranbaxy hired a new
research and development director.
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He suspected something was amiss.
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He ordered a young engineer
named Dinesh Thakur
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to study the data
in every drug application
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to find out if it was real or fake.
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Thakur eventually put together
a devastating PowerPoint
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showing Ranbaxy had falsified data
for over 200 products
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in more than 40 countries.
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The new R and D director
showed this PowerPoint
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to a subcommittee
of the board of directors.
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The subcommittee ordered the report
and the laptop on which it was created
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destroyed.
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Then they forced Thakur
out of the company.
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Thakur couldn't sleep,
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thinking about Ranbaxy's
perilously bad drugs.
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So he risked his life to alert the FDA.
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After an eight-year investigation,
Ranbaxy pled guilty to seven felonies
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for faking data.
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An FDA consultant taught me
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that just like cheap clothing
made in distant factories,
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or "fast fashion," as she called it,
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there were fast drugs, too,
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made in pharmaceutical sweatshops overseas
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with low-quality ingredients
and manufacturing shortcuts.
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In Mexico City, I sat in a bar
with a whistleblower.
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He handed me documents revealing
how the cost-cutting generic drug plant
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where he worked
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had knowingly released drug batches
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that contained glass particles.
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In Accra, capital of Ghana,
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doctors explained how low-cost
Indian and Chinese medicine of all kinds
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barely seemed to work,
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even when they doubled
and tripled the doses.
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In Mumbai, I met another whistleblower
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from a company that
I had believed was ethical.
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He sat there and described
the well-oiled machinery
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of data manipulation
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his company used to get
compromised drugs approved fast.
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With tears running down
his cheeks, he said,
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"What's going on in the industry
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is very, very, very dirty."
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In the US, a confidential source
who worked in the government
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handed me a thumb drive
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containing over 20,000
internal FDA documents.
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The emails and memos revealed
how the agency's public health mission --
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protecting consumers --
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often clashed with
its political mission --
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showing Congress a steady stream
of low-cost drug approvals.
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I also learned about the FDA's
compromised inspection system
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for overseas drug plants.
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In the US, FDA investigators
arrive unannounced
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to do surprise inspections.
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But overseas, the FDA gives
manufacturing plants
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months of advance notice.
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It asks for the company's help
arranging ground transportation
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and hotels.
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My sources also talked
about staged inspections,
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where teams of data fabricators
invent or alter needed documents
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to create a facade of compliance
long before the FDA arrives.
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One intrepid FDA investigator
named Peter Baker
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figured out how to find the truth.
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He ignored the data printouts,
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and he looked inside company computers.
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When files were deleted,
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he found metadata
revealing hidden tests.
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The companies were
prescreening their drugs,
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figuring how to alter the official tests
so they would meet FDA specifications.
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As I said, this problem is more than
a handful of bad actors.
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Over four years,
Peter Baker inspected 86 plants
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in India and China.
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He found evidence of fraud in 67 of them.
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Wonder what happens to a batch
of drugs that fails testing?
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It should get thrown out.
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Instead, low-cost plants usually sell them
into poorly regulated markets
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that don't realize what they're getting,
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places like Africa,
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Southeast Asia
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and India itself.
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The overseas generics industry
calls this "dual-track production" --
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better drugs for some,
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failed drugs for others.
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In the developing world,
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this corrupt system
has flooded the market
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with so many bad drugs
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that public health researchers link them
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to the rise of drug-resistant infections.
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But criminal behavior by overseas
companies is only half the problem.
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Though some regulators apparently
don't realize they're being conned,
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in the US, our regulators appear willing
to overlook transgressions
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in order to continue green-lighting
low-cost medicine.
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As a result, some American patients
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have gotten generic drugs
with toxic impurities,
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unapproved ingredients,
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dangerous particulates
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or that are not bioequivalent.
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As the FDA investigator
Peter Baker put it,
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if people actually understood,
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then nobody
would take these drugs.
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Are there ways to solve
this global problem?
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Yes, there are.
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Solutions begin with recognizing
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that our current honor system
for drug regulation
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is a relic of a bygone age.
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Science evolves. Medicine evolves.
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The global economy evolves.
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Shouldn't regulation evolve with them?
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Only one approach can guarantee
quality generics:
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rigorous oversight,
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including unannounced inspections
and systematic testing of drugs.
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Rigorous oversight means that regulators
don't just look at printouts of data
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that may or may not be genuine.
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Effective solutions also depend on giving
the average patient more information.
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We know where our breakfast cereal
and our running shoes are manufactured.
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Why is it different for generic drugs?
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Patients can do something else.
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They can tell their elected officials
and consumer organizations
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to speak up just as loudly
to demand quality
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as they do to demand access.
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Consumer organizations can do
their members a great service
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by testing and ranking generics,
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just like cars and washing machines.
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The big pharmacy chains
owe it to the public
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to test the drugs they dispense.
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A trip to the pharmacy
for affordable medicine
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shouldn't come with a hidden cost.
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Now is the time for all of us
who care about patient safety
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to act on what we know.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)