Field Testing for Rapid Counterfeit Drug Screening Tool Begins in Africa
Initial testing targets ability to identify fake & poor quality malaria medicines
Rockville, Md., June 4, 2014 — Field testing for a new screening tool intended to help quickly detect counterfeit and poor quality medicines has
begun at the U.S. Pharmacopeial Convention’s (USP) Center for Pharmaceutical Advancement and Training (CePAT), located
in Ghana.
The new screening device, called CD-3+, was launched by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in April 2013.
“CD-3+ is, rapid, portable device that requires little training for effective use, potentially changing the way
counterfeit and poor quality products are detected and resulting in substantial cost savings over more expensive
alternatives,” says Patrick Lukulay, Ph.D., vice president of Global Health Impact Programs at USP and director of the
Promoting the Quality of Medicines program (PQM). “The testing now underway in Ghana will provide a side-by-side
comparison of CD-3+ with other existing screening devices to assess the capability to discriminate between authentic and
substandard medicines.”
Specifically, the tests conducted in the field and at CePAT will evaluate CD-3+ in the screening of two malaria
treatments commonly used in Sub-Saharan Africa. A total of 200 test samples are being collected from sites across Ghana
through acollaborative partnership between USP and the Ghana’s Food and Drug Authority. Results from the first field
study are expected in September 2014.
“Field tests such as these will not only help us determine complementary advantages of the tools under evaluation, but
will also help identify potential design improvements to CD-3+ to enable the development of a more robust, more portable
and even easier to use tool,” says Leigh Verbois, director, Asia Pacific Office, Office of International Programs at
U.S. FDA.
The U.S. FDA was responsible for training personnel on how to properly use CD-3+ at CePAT and other test sites.
Testing is being conducted under an agreement between FDA and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), which funds PQM, operated by USP. Funding for the activity has been provided by the Skoll Global Threats Fund. Other partners include the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
“As a development agency, USAID is well-positioned for in-country capacity building such as this,” says Anthony Boni,
who leads PQM on USAID’s side through its Office of Health Systems in the Bureau for Global Health. “The presence of
infrastructure as well as established relationships with the Ghana FDA provided an excellent platform for the
field-testing of CD-3+ in Ghana.”
Since 2008, USAID, through the U.S. President’s Malaria Initiative (PMI) Ghana, has provided USP with US$1,470,000,
specifically to strengthen the capacity of the Ghana FDA for the quality assurance of medicines in Ghana.
The tests being conducted in Ghana will evaluate CD-3+ in complementing GPHF’s Minilab™ (thin-layer chromatography) and
Thermo Scientific’s TruScan™ (hand-held Raman spectrometer), evaluating counterfeit detection for two commonly used
artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs) for malaria treatment in Sub-Saharan Africa: artemether + lumefantrine
(AR-LU) and artesunate + amodiaquine (AS-AQ).
ENDS