https://www.sciencealert.com/researchers-discover-a-serious-hidden-risk-with-many-generic-drugs
24 February 2025
What the results do suggest is that the FDA’s claims that generic drugs are interchangeable may not necessarily hold true in all cases. Generic drugs may have the same active ingredients, the same dosage form, and the same routes of administration, but that doesn’t mean they are made with the same best practices.
Manufacturing operations and supply chain activity could be impacting the quality of these meds, making it more likely that a patient experiences severe side effects.
“There are good manufacturers in India, there are bad manufacturers in the US, and we’re not advocating for ending offshore production of drugs or bashing India in any way,” says business analytics researcher John Gray from OSU.
“We believe this is a regulatory oversight issue that can be improved.”
In the last few decades, the generic drug landscape in the US has shifted as foreign competition for a chunk of the market surges. Nationwide, generic drugs account for more than 90 percent of all dispensed prescriptions, and a lot of these now come from overseas.
In just a short space of time, India’s pharmaceutical industry has grown to supply nearly half of all the generic prescription drugs filed in the US, including those for hypertension, mental health, lipid regulation, nervous system disorders, and ulcers.
The FDA currently maintains confidentiality regarding the location of generic drug manufacturing. Even submitting a freedom of information request won’t change that. This means that it’s really difficult to confirm the agency’s claims that generic drugs are interchangeable.
The team got around this hurdle by using the Structured Product Labeling set, which provides data for all drugs on the US market, including the manufacturer name and plant location.
Specifically, generic drugs from India that had been on the US market for longer were more likely than US drugs of an equivalent age to be associated with severe side effects, the researchers found.
This suggests a ‘race to the bottom’, whereby competition for drugs with low profit margins has grown so great that company attempts to make the medicine as cheaply as possible have impacted its quality.
