
'It's heartbreaking': Cancer drugs shipped to more than 100 countries fail quality tests
The drugs in question form the backbone of treatment plans for numerous common cancers, including breast, ovarian and leukemia. Over the past six years, they have been shipped to every populated continent on the planet, to both low- and middle-income countries like Nepal, Ethiopia and North Korea, and wealthy nations such as the US, UK and Saudi Arabia.
The test findings come from a landmark study by researchers at the University of Notre Dame, Indiana, who analysed 189 samples of various cancer drugs. About one-fifth failed.
"We were all taken aback when we saw the results,' said Marya Lieberman, the professor who led the research.
The worst-performing drug in the study is made by Indian manufacturer Venus Remedies. All eight samples of the company's cyclophosphamide product failed, with six containing less than half the stated active ingredient.
Venus Remedies told TBIJ that our results were 'not scientifically plausible' given the company's 'validated manufacturing systems and quality controls.' It said it has received no complaints or concerns about the batches in question and shared the results of its own testing that indicated they were of a good standard.
The manufacturer said storage conditions in the supply chain – which can impact drug quality – might have affected the researchers' test results. However, the absence of similar quality issues across the entire data set suggests this is not the case.
Venus Remedies is one of three companies or regulators that queried the methodology used by the lab, saying it deviated from international standards or could give erroneous results. However, Lieberman said that her researchers' methods follow international standards as closely as possible and employ similar standards to a regulatory lab. Both the findings and methods have been scrutinised by independent academics.
Two other manufacturers whose products failed the testing, Zuvius Lifesciences and GLS Pharma, have supplied failed brands to over 40 countries.
Of the 17 companies to have manufactured failed drugs, 16 are based in India. Five have been previously flagged by regulators for producing substandard drugs, including Zee Laboratories, which has been flagged 46 times since 2018.
Some drugs contained so little of their key ingredient that pharmacists said giving them to patients would be as good as doing nothing. Other drugs, containing too much active ingredient, put patients at risk of severe organ damage or even death. 'Both scenarios are horrendous,' said Shereen Nabhani-Gebara, vice chair of the British Oncology Pharmacists Association. 'It's heartbreaking.'
Zuvius Lifesciences, GLS Pharma, and Zee Laboratories did not respond to multiple requests for comment.
Doctors from multiple countries told TBIJ of the drugs in question not working as expected, leaving patients suddenly unresponsive to treatment. Other patients suffered side effects so toxic that they could no longer tolerate the medicine. 'It's very worrying,' a pharmacist in Malawi told TBIJ.
These findings expose huge holes in the global safety nets intended to prevent profit-seeking manufacturers from cutting corners and to protect patients from bad drugs. More than two in three countries around the world are reportedly unable to ensure the quality of medicines their populations are exposed to.
One such country is Nepal, which is also one of the biggest importers of the failed chemotherapy brands in this investigation. The country's medicines regulator does not have the capacity to test cancer drugs and although it can recall cancer drugs based on external evidence, it has never done so.
'Neither patients nor their families have any way of knowing the quality of these drugs,' said Smriti Pokharel of the Wish Nepal Foundation. 'No one seems willing to take responsibility for ensuring proper treatment for cancer patients.'
Much of the global demand for cancer treatment is met by generic drugs, which can be made once the original manufacturer's exclusivity rights have expired. The bad drugs found by TBIJ in this investigation were all generics.
In India, the world's largest producer of generic drugs, questions have been raised over whether manufacturers are properly punished for producing drugs unfit for purpose.
'The Indian government's interest is in trying to protect the industry,' said public health activist and former Big Pharma whistleblower Dinesh Thakur.
India's drug regulator defended the oversight system, saying that failing drugs are recalled and manufacturers face 'either administrative penalties or legal prosecution in court'.
Thakur pointed to limitations in the World Health Organization's means of ensuring that people across the world have access to safe effective drugs. He described one WHO standards certificate scheme as 'not worth the paper it's written on'. The WHO did not respond to several requests for comment made by TBIJ.
One cancer pharmacist in Ethiopia estimated that it could take over a year for a patient to save for cancer treatment. If that medicine then turns out to be faulty, they simply might not be able to afford to pay for another.
'Most people believe cancer is incurable,' they said. 'When they end up with a medicine that won't cure them, that's another tragedy.'

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Eyewitness News
5 days ago
- Eyewitness News
'It's heartbreaking': Cancer drugs shipped to more than 100 countries fail quality tests
Vital chemotherapy drugs used around the world have failed quality tests, leaving cancer patients in more than 100 countries at risk of ineffective treatments and fatal side effects, the Bureau of Investigative Journalism (TBIJ) can reveal. The drugs in question form the backbone of treatment plans for numerous common cancers, including breast, ovarian and leukemia. Over the past six years, they have been shipped to every populated continent on the planet, to both low- and middle-income countries like Nepal, Ethiopia and North Korea, and wealthy nations such as the US, UK and Saudi Arabia. The test findings come from a landmark study by researchers at the University of Notre Dame, Indiana, who analysed 189 samples of various cancer drugs. About one-fifth failed. "We were all taken aback when we saw the results,' said Marya Lieberman, the professor who led the research. The worst-performing drug in the study is made by Indian manufacturer Venus Remedies. All eight samples of the company's cyclophosphamide product failed, with six containing less than half the stated active ingredient. Venus Remedies told TBIJ that our results were 'not scientifically plausible' given the company's 'validated manufacturing systems and quality controls.' It said it has received no complaints or concerns about the batches in question and shared the results of its own testing that indicated they were of a good standard. The manufacturer said storage conditions in the supply chain – which can impact drug quality – might have affected the researchers' test results. However, the absence of similar quality issues across the entire data set suggests this is not the case. Venus Remedies is one of three companies or regulators that queried the methodology used by the lab, saying it deviated from international standards or could give erroneous results. However, Lieberman said that her researchers' methods follow international standards as closely as possible and employ similar standards to a regulatory lab. Both the findings and methods have been scrutinised by independent academics. Two other manufacturers whose products failed the testing, Zuvius Lifesciences and GLS Pharma, have supplied failed brands to over 40 countries. Of the 17 companies to have manufactured failed drugs, 16 are based in India. Five have been previously flagged by regulators for producing substandard drugs, including Zee Laboratories, which has been flagged 46 times since 2018. Some drugs contained so little of their key ingredient that pharmacists said giving them to patients would be as good as doing nothing. Other drugs, containing too much active ingredient, put patients at risk of severe organ damage or even death. 'Both scenarios are horrendous,' said Shereen Nabhani-Gebara, vice chair of the British Oncology Pharmacists Association. 'It's heartbreaking.' Zuvius Lifesciences, GLS Pharma, and Zee Laboratories did not respond to multiple requests for comment. Doctors from multiple countries told TBIJ of the drugs in question not working as expected, leaving patients suddenly unresponsive to treatment. Other patients suffered side effects so toxic that they could no longer tolerate the medicine. 'It's very worrying,' a pharmacist in Malawi told TBIJ. These findings expose huge holes in the global safety nets intended to prevent profit-seeking manufacturers from cutting corners and to protect patients from bad drugs. More than two in three countries around the world are reportedly unable to ensure the quality of medicines their populations are exposed to. One such country is Nepal, which is also one of the biggest importers of the failed chemotherapy brands in this investigation. The country's medicines regulator does not have the capacity to test cancer drugs and although it can recall cancer drugs based on external evidence, it has never done so. 'Neither patients nor their families have any way of knowing the quality of these drugs,' said Smriti Pokharel of the Wish Nepal Foundation. 'No one seems willing to take responsibility for ensuring proper treatment for cancer patients.' Much of the global demand for cancer treatment is met by generic drugs, which can be made once the original manufacturer's exclusivity rights have expired. The bad drugs found by TBIJ in this investigation were all generics. In India, the world's largest producer of generic drugs, questions have been raised over whether manufacturers are properly punished for producing drugs unfit for purpose. 'The Indian government's interest is in trying to protect the industry,' said public health activist and former Big Pharma whistleblower Dinesh Thakur. India's drug regulator defended the oversight system, saying that failing drugs are recalled and manufacturers face 'either administrative penalties or legal prosecution in court'. Thakur pointed to limitations in the World Health Organization's means of ensuring that people across the world have access to safe effective drugs. He described one WHO standards certificate scheme as 'not worth the paper it's written on'. The WHO did not respond to several requests for comment made by TBIJ. One cancer pharmacist in Ethiopia estimated that it could take over a year for a patient to save for cancer treatment. If that medicine then turns out to be faulty, they simply might not be able to afford to pay for another. 'Most people believe cancer is incurable,' they said. 'When they end up with a medicine that won't cure them, that's another tragedy.'


Eyewitness News
5 days ago
- Eyewitness News
SA among 100 countries that received cancer medication that failed quality tests
JOHANNESBURG - South Africa is featured among countries that have received faulty cancer medication that may have caused the death of some patients. A study by the University of Notre Dame, in collaboration with the Bureau of Investigative Journalism (TBIJ), has revealed that one-fifth of the cancer medication tested among four African countries failed quality standards. READ: 'It's heartbreaking': Cancer drugs shipped to more than 100 countries fail quality tests According to the report, the questionable medication has been used on cancer patients in more than 100 countries and was shipped from India. While none of the samples of doxorubicin or methotrexate that was shipped into South Africa was tested in the study, these are some of the chemotherapy drugs that were found to either have too little active pharmaceutical ingredients to work or had too much toxicity in them that may have caused death. According to the report, South Africa received 850 packages of these medicines, which made their way to pharmacies and hospitals between 2018 and 2023. The Bureau for Investigative Journalism's Andjela Milivojevic: "The drugs that researchers tested have failed quality testing, which means that their active ingredient have been measured and active ingredients was really, really low, which means they are probably not going to help a patient at all. In some of them, the active ingredient is so high that they become toxic." While researchers say South Africa is on the list of countries that received these drugs, it's unclear if any cancer patients succumbed to the disease while receiving treatment with these drugs. The health department confirmed that the drugs were being used to treat cancer in South Africa.

IOL News
24-06-2025
- IOL News
India is on the road to becoming a semiconductor powerhouse
Researchers wearing bunny suits work inside the semiconductor fabrication lab at the Centre for Nano Science and Engineering (CENSe), situated at the Indian Institute of Science (IISc), in Bangalore. Image: AFP India will soon reach a milestone in technological advancement with the impending mass rollout of its first indigenously made semiconductor chip, with strong state support from and incentivising by the New Delhi Government. Announcing the roll-out this year of the first "Made in India" semiconductor 28-90 nm chip at the Madhya Pradesh Global Investor Summit 2025 in Bhopal, Union IT and Electronics Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw said: We are seeing the prospect of India being a global semiconductor manufacturing powerhouse in 2025." He added: "We targeted a particular segment, which has 60% of market volume, using a targeted approach. Today, we have six units under construction. The first made-in-India chip of 28-90 nm will roll out this year." This breakthrough is the culmination of three years of rapid semiconductor technology for India's rapid advancement. In February 2022, the Tata Group, in collaboration with Taiwan's Powerchip Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp (PSMC), secured approval for the establishment of India's first semiconductor fab. In September 2024, they established India's earliest semiconductor production facility with an output of 50 000 wafers per month earmarked for sectors ranging from automotive, computers, data storage, to wireless communications. There was phenomenal interest from investors, and by 2024, funding for semiconductor startups increased to over $28 million (R506m) from $5m in 2023. The investor enthusiasm is attributed to the Indian government's efforts towards self-sufficiency in semiconductors, and the participation of conglomerates like Larsen & Toubro and the Adani Group, adding impetus to the development of India's semiconductor manufacturing sector. A major player in helping New Delhi reach this stage of development in the semiconductor sector is the India Semiconductor Mission (ISM), which was established to position the country as a global electronics hub and reduce India's reliance on imported semiconductor chips by establishing a self-reliant electronics manufacturing ecosystem in the country. The ISM falls within India's "Atmanirbhar Bharat" programme to develop domestic manufacturing and technology in various sectors of the country. Video Player is loading. Play Video Play Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration -:- Loaded : 0% Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. 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