Local manufacturing of stents could begin by end of this year
After years of media criticism and the intervention of the Supreme Court, health institutions are hoping that the cost of stents and angioplasty procedures will be lowered now that the production of local stents is expected to start by the end of this year.
Local production would address the requirement for stents and make the devices more affordable. No singular international company is able to meet Pakistan’s requirements, because of which three to four companies are currently exporting stents into the country.
“We get a top quality stent for Rs100,000, and after including balloons, medicines and fees each procedure costs Rs200,000, compared to Rs250,000 in private hospitals. If local production starts we will buy stents for around Rs40,000,” the head of the Rawalpindi Institute of Cardiology (RIC), retired Maj Gen Dr Azhar Mahmood Kayani, told Dawn.
He said that last year the cost was around Rs160,000, but “now because of the devaluation of the rupee the cost has increased by around Rs30,000.”
Dr Kayani said that approximately 40,000 documented angioplasties take place in Pakistan every year. One international company cannot therefore meet Pakistan’s needs, as they manufacture stents for other countries as well.
“The National University of Sciences and Technology (Nust) has been working on manufacturing stents. Although the stents have been prepared they are in the testing process, and hopefully production will be started by the end of the year. The stents have been tested in a Polish lab,” he said.
When asked, Dr Kayani said Punjab Chief Minister Sardar Usman Buzdar recently visited the RIC and was informed that the hospital was Pakistan’s first and only cardiac centre to perform acute brain stroke interventions, reversing paralysis in stroke patients.
He said that it was proposed that all vascular diseases should be treated under one roof, and the chief minister had agreed and begun the process to allocate funding. The RIC is going to be renamed the Pakistan Cardiac and Vascular Institute.
Stents are small expandable tubes that are used to treat narrowed arteries. In people with coronary heart disease caused by the build-up of plaque, stents can open narrowed arteries and reduce symptoms such as chest pain, and help to prevent cardiac arrest.
Unregistered cardiac stents worth Rs250 million were recovered from the Mayo Hospital in Lahore in January 2017, and it was revealed that there had been cases were patients were told they had received stents even when the devices were not placed in their arteries.
The Supreme Court on suo motu had pushed the Drug Regulatory Authority of Pakistan (Drap) and other stakeholders to ensure high quality stents are available at affordable prices.
It was also then revealed that there was no mechanism for selling stents. In the absence of which, rather than selling stents through medical stores companies’ representatives at cardiac centres sold stents to patients without giving them authentic receipts. This left people in the dark about the kind and quality of stents that were used in their procedures.
The matter was also investigated by the Federal Investigation Agency, which suggested reforms. In response, the court directed Drap and the Pakistan Society of Interventional Cardiology (PSIC) to address the issue.
Established in 2005, the PSIC aims to improve interventional practices in Pakistan to meet international standards and maintain an adequate level of training for young interventionists across the country. One of its priorities is national database and registry systems, and it aims to promote cardiac health through education, advanced interventional methods and improved preventive strategies.
University of Health Sciences (UHS) Vice Chancellor Dr Javed Akram told Dawn that UHS has also been working on manufacturing stents.
“We have not only manufactured stents but have also experimented by placing them in animals, as they cannot be placed in human beings without a detailed research report. We have also contacted a lab in Germany to test our stents. I believe we will be able to start commercial manufacturing by 2020,” he said.
There are two types of stents mostly used in Pakistan, explained medical devices director at Drap Ghazanfer Ali Khan. One is a bare metal stent that lacks a medicine coating and the second are drug-eluting stents, which are coated with immunosuppressant medicine to lower the body’s ability to reject a transplanted organ or medical device. Drug-eluting stents are also divided into three generations, the third made from chromium cobalt.
The third kind, bioresorbable stents, are absorbed into the body or become part of the body, he added. These are registered in Pakistan but rarely used.