Raw material: Sustainable availability and concern regarding medicinal plants on negative list Palpu Pushpangadan ([email protected]) Director General Amity Institute for herbal and Biotech Products Development Trivandrum, Kerala International Conclave on 16th & 17th Nov, 2006 Traditional Medicine New Delhi AMITY We nurture talent
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Raw material: Sustainable availability and concern regarding medicinal plants on negative list Palpu Pushpangadan ([email protected]) Director.
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Raw material: Sustainable availability and concern
Amity Institute for herbal and Biotech Products Development
Trivandrum, Kerala
International Conclave on 16th & 17th Nov, 2006Traditional Medicine New Delhi
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Traditional Medicine (TM)
All healthcare practices and treatment of diseases practiced by traditional communities or local people in most of the third world nations are termed as Traditional Medicine.
In fact all medicare practices of whole humankind before the on set of modern medicine in 19th Century were all Traditional Medicine.
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World Health Organization (WHO) defined TM as the sum total of the knowledge, skills and practices based on the theories, beliefs and experiences of indigenous cultures whether explicable or not used in the maintenance of health and in the prevention, diagnosis, improvement or treatment of physical and mental illness. The term ‘complementary medicine’, ‘alternate medicine’, and ‘non-conventional medicine’ etc. are used interchangeably with ‘traditional medicine’ in some countries. The raw materials for TM is mainly medicinal plants.
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TM:
Fact file on Medicinal Plants
• Medicinal plants are important components of Biodiveristy-a product of 3500 million years of evolution life on Earth. 30-100 Million species of life on Earth today– 300,000 higher plants – out of which
216,000 are in TROPICS– Over 75,000 higher plants are used by
different cultures for medicinal & aromatic purpose
– Over 15,000 higher plants species are used in Asia
• About 7,000 in China & About 8,000 India
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Flowering plants used in Traditional Systems of Medicine
in India
Modern Medicine 30 spp.
Amchi 300 spp.
Unani 700 spp.
Siddha 800 spp.
Ayurveda 900 spp.
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Some features of modern health care
Modern health care policies largely market driven by the pharmaceutical industry diverting attention from health preservation to illness cure
Prevention and eradication of diseases undermines the economic basis of this industry
No satisfactory drugs available for most of the degenerative disorders characteristic of graying population and for re-emerging resistant infections
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Modern Drugs / Herbal Drugs
• Modern drugs normally single molecules, rigorously tested, structures optimized, toxicologically cleared, Mechanism generally known and clinical trials done.Herbals have many molecules, safety and efficacy based on experiences of practitioners.
• Many modern drugs known to have severe side reactions (4th – 6th largest cause of death in US)Herbals generally considered benign. Mechanism of action not known
• More than 40 % modern drugs are plant based.
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Advantages of Herbal Drugs
Modern drugs can produce serious side effects • Iatrogenic diseases fourth leading cause of death
in USA and other developed nations (JAMA, April 1998).
• Side effects of drugs kill more Americans annually than the world war II and Vietnam war combined (N. Y. Times 28.02.2003)
• Around 2600 persons died in the Twin Tower tragedy on 11th September 2001 causing global repercussions. It is, however, not recognized that about the same number die in USA from side effects of prescription drugs every 10 days (JAMA, April 1998).
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Strength of Ayurveda: Challenging diseases for which herbal drugs can be an answer
For stand alone therapies:- Degenerative, metabolic and immune based diseases having multiple causes like cancer, diabetes, arthritis, peptic ulcer, cardiovascular disorders, osteoporosis, Alzheimer and other CNS disorders.-parasite based diseases like malaria, filaria.
Adjuvants: primarily to reduce side effects Mop-up therapy: immuno-stimulants for cancer TB
etc. Prophylactics for diabetes, cancer Detoxifiers based on Ayurveda/Sidda/Unani
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Weakness: Lack of Quality assurance of raw materials/medicinal plants
The therapeutic quality/effect of medicinal plants are due to the presence of the biologically active chemicals which are mostly secondary metabolities such as alkaloids, glycosides, saponins, coumarins, flavonoids and terpenes, etc.
75% to 80% of the medicinal plants required in Traditional Medicines (TM) is collected from wild. Sustained supply of quality raw materials is therefore difficult.
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35 to 40% of the Medicinal plants used in TM are cross-pollinated species and hence there exists vast intraspecific genetic variability with respect to the morphological and chemical constituents.
Heritability of these compounds are controlled by a variety of factors-genetic and macro and micro environment, season and stage, growth and development of the plant.
Weakness: Lack of Quality assurance
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Weakness:• Lack of written documentary evidence on clinical
efficacy.• TM- more particularly Ayurveda was/is
essentially a highly customized/ individualized medicine. Transformation into a generalized and commercial system has adversely affected the system
• Lack of consistency in quality in batch to batch production of products.
• Lack of a well defined and well orchestrated SOP.
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Quality assurance of raw materials
Genetic variants (at ploidy level or gene level) leading to the variability in the chemical composition in the population.
Geographical and edaphic factors-altitude, soil composition, microbial load/association, climate, temperature, season etc can cause variation.
Association with plants, animals and insects.
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Eg. Seasonal variations in the alkaloid composition in the leaves of Adhatoda vasica has been recorded. It is lowest in February and March and highest in the months of August, September and October. Similarly variation of alkaloid contents based on the age of the plant is reported in Holarrhena antidysenterica
Quality assurance of medicinal plants
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Herbal Medicine Regulation in European Union
TM like Ayurveda gained popularity in Europe as a willness system. Ayurveda and other TM drugs were marketed as food supplements, cosmetics and health promoters. After the formation of European Union, the member countries decided to have their herbal industries and products under identical medicine controls by the end of 1992.
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UK was the first to introduce a Medicine Law in 1968 which made it mandatory to license all Herbal (Medicine) manufactured. Pure herbal medicine prepared by herbalist for treating his patients are exempted under sec. 12 of the Act licensing herbal medicine demanded documentary proof of efficacy and safety data.
Herbal Medicine Regulation
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The European court (EC) directed that any product legally sold in one country of the Union must be freely sold in all other countries-with a provision “as long as the product was safe and did not harm consumers. EC Directive on Traditional Herbal medicine products (2001/83/EC and amendment 2004/27/EC). The Directive came into force from 1st Nov 2005 with a transitional period upto 2011. It introduced a fast track Traditional Use Registration (TUR) which need not supply any costly safety studies that need to provide documentary evidence of its traditional use.
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Traditional Use Registration (TUR)
Under TUR, TM can be sold without the intervention of practitioner. For registering such products has to produce data on quality, traditional use history for a total of 30 yrs of which 15 years should be within EU countries. Registration of such product, however, could cost as much as E 7500 to 100,000 per product.
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Positive list of herbal substance
A committee for Herbal Medicinal products is established by the Directive, to prepare a positive list of herbal substances with therapeutic indicators, specified strength, route of administration and relevant safety information. The applicant can get the exemption from licensing without any traditional use data or safety data of the concerned herbal substance is in the list but just providing the quality data in the form of monographs.
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The German commission E came out with monographs for Therapeutic Guide to Herbal medicine which covered extensive published literature as chemistry, pharmacology, clinical and toxicology of herbal drugs and preparing a positive as well as negative list of herbal drugs and medicinal plants. The German Commission so far made a list of 254 positive monographs and 126 unapproved (negative) monograph. 45 herbs were negatively evaluated based on document risk.
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Positive & Negative List
Negative List:
This include Indian plants like:Basil, Celery, Chamomile, Cocoa, Colycynth, Ergot, Lemon grass, Liver wort, Marjoram, Nutmeg, Periwinkle, Oleander, Nuxuomica, Passely seeds, Papain seeds, Rhododendron, saffron, Sarasaparilla roots, walnut null. The commission also developed a neetral list which are suspected danger list.Basil is Ocimum basilicum having estragole with mutagenic effect
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Neutral list
57 unapproved monographs due lack of scientific documentation of the use claimed by industry is kept under neutral list with the condition that if safety and efficacy data is provided it can be included in the positive list.This include:Calendula, Chestnut leaf, Pimpenella, Papaya leaf, Corsuflower, Red sandalwood, Spinach leaf, Figs, Echinacea angustifolia, Ginkgo biloba etc.
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Sweden’s negative list of medicinal plants for health food
June 2005 Sweden came out with another negative list of medicinal plants based on toxicological evaluation of medicinal plants and recommended not to use them in health food, or nutraceuticals or in food supplements. This include plants of Indian origin such as
Reason for decline of quality in TM like Ayurvedic medicine
TM like Ayurveda was/is essentially a personalized/customized system of diagnosis and treatment. Collection of raw materials, preprocessing were done as per strict guideline which was based on experiential wisdom. Transformation into generalized and commercial system Ayurveda suffered greatly in quality assurance.
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Traditional Medicine: Threats
Poor positioning on a global levelIgnored by global scientific communityVery little work on scientific validationsLack of well defined and well orchestrated