The Fatal Consequences of Counterfeit Drugs
In Southeast Asia, forensic investigators using cutting-edge tools are helping stanch the deadly trade in fake anti-malaria drugs
- By Andrew Marshall
- Photographs by Jack Picone
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2009, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 5)
Compared with what Americans typically pay for drugs, genuine artesunate is cheap in Southeast Asian countries—around $2 for the standard treatment of a dozen pills. But that's still 20 times more expensive than an earlier antimalarial, chloroquine, now seldom used because the malaria parasite has evolved resistance to it. And in Cambodia, where the average per capita income is just $300 a year, the nickels or dimes people save buying counterfeit artesunate pills represent significant savings. "It's the number one fake," says Ouk Vichea.
Bogus medicines are by no means limited to malaria or Southeast Asia; business is booming in India, Africa and Latin America. The New York City-based Center for Medicine in the Public Interest estimates that the global trade in fake pharmaceuticals—including treatments for malaria, tuberculosis and AIDS—will reach $75 billion a year in 2010. In developing countries, corruption among government officials and police officers, along with weak border controls, allow counterfeiters to ply their trade with relative impunity. Counterfeiting is "a relatively high-profit and risk-free venture," says Paul Newton, a British physician at Mahosot Hospital in Vientiane, Laos. "Very few people are sent to jail for dealing in fake anti-infectives."
When the fake artesunate pills first appeared in Southeast Asia in the late 1990s, they were relatively easy to distinguish. They had odd shapes and their packaging was crudely printed. Even so, Guilin Pharmaceutical, a company based in southern China's Guangxi autonomous region and one of the largest producers of genuine artesunate in Asia, took extra steps to authenticate its medication by adding batch numbers and holograms to the packaging. But the counterfeiters quickly caught on—new and improved fakes appeared with imitation holograms.
Then, in May of 2005, with the counterfeiters gaining ground, a number of physicians, officials, researchers and others gathered at the WHO regional office in Manila. Public health experts agreed to join forces with the International Criminal Police Organization (Interpol). They would try to track down the sources of the bogus artesunate and disrupt the trade. They would launch an investigation like no other, drawing on an extraordinary range of authorities in subjects from holography to pollen grains. They would call it the Jupiter Operation.
Paul Newton attended that first meeting in Manila, which he recalls was held in an atmosphere of "some desperation." He would coordinate the scientific investigation, which included experts from nine countries. "No one had tried to bring diverse police forces, forensic scientists, doctors and administrators together before," he says.
The goal was to gather enough evidence to halt the illicit trade by putting the counterfeiters behind bars. But first they had to be found. The investigators collected 391 "artesunate" samples from across Southeast Asia and subjected each pill packet to a battery of tests. "We were all working on pieces of a puzzle," says Michael Green, a research chemist at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta. "When these pieces—chemical, mineralogical, biological, packaging analysis—were compared and assembled, a picture of where many of these counterfeits were coming from began to emerge."
The investigators pored over each package. In some cases, a mere glance was sufficient to spot the fakes: lettering was misaligned or words were misspelled ("tabtle" instead of "tablet"). Most of the time, though, the flaws were more subtle.
To examine the holograms, Newton called in a British holography expert named David Pizzanelli. The son of a Florentine painter, Pizzanelli had studied holography at London's Royal College of Art, and his artwork has been exhibited at top British galleries. He has lent his expertise to the Counterfeiting Intelligence Bureau, part of the anti-crime unit of the Paris-based International Chamber of Commerce.
The Jupiter Operation "was extreme in several ways," Pizzanelli says. "It was the first time I'd seen such an abundance of counterfeits, probably with the exception of Microsoft." (Bogus versions of Microsoft software blanket the world, costing the company billions of dollars.) Pizzanelli identified 14 types of fake Guilin Pharmaceutical holograms. "It's a unique case in terms of how many counterfeit holograms there are. The real one just gets lost in the avalanche of images."
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Related topics: Monarchy Viruses Poverty Asia Cambodia Towns and Villages
Additional Sources
"A Collaborative Epidemiological Investigation into the Criminal Fake Artesunate Trade in South East Asia," Paul N. Newton et al., PLOS Medicine, February 2008.
"Manslaughter by Fake Artesunate in Asia—Will Africa Be Next?," Paul N. Newton et al., PLOS Medicine, June 2006.









Comments (7)
i need more explanation on the biological and chemical implication/consequences of counterfeit drugs and how they affect the control of parasitic diseases using Malaria as a case study.
Posted by Chukwunonso Gabriel on February 22,2012 | 11:11 AM
i need more published article on the public health significance of fake drugs.
Posted by nwaobia ,darlington onyebuchi on June 7,2010 | 11:34 AM
I have more than a few ideas how to authenticate the real medications from the counterfeits. I do not wish to post them here as I am sure the counterfeiters research these articles. Please contact me through my email address, prove that it is from the WHO, and I will reveal some alternative methodology to weaken the fake ones appeal as well as making the real ones easier to identify. I look forward to your e-mail as I wish to help eradicate this epidemic and protect innocent victims. I pray that you will take such ideas into consideration.
Thank you for your time.
Sincerely,
Rachel Fleury
Posted by Rachel Terry on February 2,2010 | 03:14 PM
Drug counterfeiting is an existing risk to safety in USA.
Food and Drug Administration news release of October 15, 2009 warns of counterfeit H1N1 drug products now offered for sale in the USA.
S-525, now proposed in the US Senate, would weaken current law protecting US citizens by imposing an impossible and costly effort on the Department of Health and Human Services by requiring the Secretary to ascertain the drug safety and effiacacy laws of other countries and monitor their enforcement.
Posted by Martha Mohler on November 1,2009 | 09:16 AM
Many thanks for your informative article entitled, “Fatal Consequences of Counterfeit Drugs”. This problem has been “under the radar” for many years and is just now receiving attention as a public health issue. The practice is particularly devious, since it takes advantage of people already encumbered with disease and poor living conditions. As part of the “team of scientists” involved in Operation Jupiter, I would like to mention another team member, Prof. Facundo Fernandez (Georgia Institute of Technology) whose work using state-of-the-art mass spectrometric techniques was instrumental in identifying the compounds present in the counterfeits as well as providing the chemical fingerprints used to help elucidate the source of the fakes.
Michael Green
Atlanta, GA
Posted by Michael Green on October 19,2009 | 09:03 AM
The answer to eradicating malaria is DDT. Even the UN supports using it, but quietly, to avoid ruffling the feathers of the econuts who still support Rachel Carson's mistaken and erroneous condemnation of this most effective insecticide.
Posted by Wayne Wright on October 13,2009 | 01:01 PM
How terribly tragic, another example of the poorest among us being deceived and hurt. May God help them all.
Posted by Jennie Taylor on October 13,2009 | 08:08 AM