High Court rules in favour of the Medicines Control Council
The North Gauteng High Court in Pretoria has ruled in favour of the Medicines Control Council (MCC) and others in a matter concerning Adcock Ingram's resistance to the MCC's decision to cancel the registration of drugs containing dextropropoxyphene (DPP). The MCC made the decision in April 2011 after coming to the conclusion that the risks posed by such medicines outweigh their benefits.
In particular, the MCC concluded that the drugs present a danger to the public as they may cause serious damage to heart muscles, inhibiting the heart from supplying blood to the rest of the body at normal doses and deadly heart failure in higher doses. Death seems to occur before patients can be hospitalised and there is no antidote.
Concerns over the safety of DPP have previously prompted stringent drug regulatory authorities in the European Union, the United States and the United Kingdom among others to withdraw DPP-containing medicines from the market. Adcock Ingram is one of the primary manufacturers of drugs containing DPP in South Africa, selling the following branded drugs: Synap Forte, Lentogesic, and Doxyfene.
In an attempt to keep the drugs on the shelves, Adcock Ingram appealed the decision, arguing that the effect of its action was to suspend the MCC's decision. The MCC disagreed, continuing to implement its original decision. On 28 September 2011, it finally distributed a Dear Health Care Professional (DHCP) letter in which the decision was explained to doctors, pharmacists and other professionals.
After failing to convince the MCC to withdraw the DHCP letter, Adcock Ingram made an urgent application to the high court in which it essentially sought two things: first, that it could continue marketing the drugs pending the appeal; and second, an order compelling the MCC to withdraw its DHCP letter.