MSF104225
Press release |

Treatment Ends for Chagas Patients

Photograph by Vania Alves
MSF104225 Photograph by Vania Alves

Treatment Shortage Forces MSF to Halt Diagnosing Chagas Disease in Paraguay; New Treatment Projects Suspended in Endemic Areas in Bolivia

Asunción/Barcelona/La Paz/Rio de Janeiro, 5 October 2011 — Thousands of people with Chagas disease will go untreated in coming months due to a shortage of benznidazole, the first-line drug used in most Chagas-endemic countries. The shortage comes as a number of countries actively seek to treat people living with the already long neglected disease. The international medical humanitarian organization Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is urging the Brazilian Ministry of Health, responsible for the world’s only laboratory that manufactures benznidazole, to respect its commitment to Chagas patients and to take immediate measures to make the drug available. 

Chagas treatment depends entirely on a single pharmaceutical company to produce benznidazole tablets, the Brazilian State laboratory LAFEPE (Laboratorio Farmaceutico do Estado de Pernambuco). Production of the drug’s active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) used by LAFEPE was recently transferred to a sole private company, Nortec Química. There is not enough API at present to produce the tablets needed, and Nortec has yet to validate production. In addition, LAFEPE has breached its promise to publish and fulfil a manufacturing schedule that would ensure availability of the drug.

As a result, various national Chagas programmes in Latin America are already struggling to meet demand for new treatment, and are expected to run out of stocks of benznidazole in the next few months. No information has been provided by the Brazilian Ministry of Health on the situation, and the World Health Organization (WHO) and Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) have not put a contingency plan in place to maintain stocks of the drug for acute cases of Chagas. Future availability of the drug is not known; according to various estimations it is unlikely to be before mid-2012.

“This situation is unacceptable,” said Dr Henry Rodríguez, MSF head of mission in Bolivia and Paraguay. “In Boquerón, an area with one of the highest rates of Chagas in Paraguay, we are forced to stop diagnosing patients because we simply don’t have the drugs to treat them. For decades Chagas was a completely neglected disease and just when diagnosis and treatment were finally being made a priority, we’ve run out of medication,” he said. We must not allow this to continue — an urgent solution must be found for our patients.”

In recent years, demand for treatment has increased significantly because adults are now being treated in addition to children. Additionaly, the WHO and PAHO have strongly endorsed diagnosis and treatment at the primary healthcare level. However, all progress made to-date is now jeopardised by the shortage of benznidazole.

“Although we know that current treatment is more effective and more likely to prevent complications the sooner a patient is treated, we will be forced to delay it,” said Dr Unni Karunakara, MSF international president.

MSF has called upon the Brazilian Ministry of Health to commit to speeding up the current benznidazole manufacturing process by streamlining its validation with the API produced by Nortec. Given that the production, distribution, and sales process will last for several months, Brazil must spearhead a regional contingency plan—with the support of PAHO—for the rational use of benznidazole stocks among the most vulnerable groups in endemic countries. MSF is also urging the Ministries of Health of endemic countries to demand this contingency plan be put in place as soon as possible, while finding a definitive solution for the long term.

“The Brazilian government has been pioneering in the production of generic drugs, showing its commitment to people who need access to treatment,” said Dr Karunakara. “It must now act swiftly to keep its commitment to Chagas patients worldwide.”

About Chagas Disease

Chagas disease, also known as Human American Trypanosomiasis, is an infectious disease caused by the parasite Trypanosoma cruzi. Endemic in several Latin American countries, it causes 12,500 deaths per year and it is estimated that 8-10 million people have the disease. Case numbers are rising in the US, Europe, Australia, and Japan as a result of greater international travel.

In most Latin American countries the disease is primarily transmitted by the “assassin bug,” although it can also be transmitted from mother to child, through blood transfusions, organ transplants, contaminated food, and laboratory accidents. Because the infection is usually asymptomatic, most patients are unaware that they have it. However, as the disease progresses, roughly 30 percent of patients develop heart lesions and 10 percent suffer potentially fatal gastrointestinal damage.

Until recently, treatment was thought only to be effective in the acute stage of the disease (up to three months after being infected) and in its very early chronic stage. However, studies now show that treatment can also be effective in the chronic stage. It has was also found in recent years that the side effects of benznidazole, which are more common in adults, are manageable, and that treatment is feasible under supervision in primary healthcare settings.