Gluten
in Pharmaceutical products
|
Gluten is a protein found in wheat,
barley and rye. Celiac disease (coeliac disease/celiac spur) is an auto immune
disease of the digestive tract that affects about 3 million people in united
states. When patients with celiac disease ingest gluten, an immunologically
mediated inflammatory response occurs that damages the mucosa of the intestine
resulting in maldigestion and malabsorption, abdominal pain, diarrhoea, constipation,
vomiting and other problems. The treatment for celiac disease is adherence to a
gluten free diet.
It is recognized that pharmaceutical
products may contain traces of gluten, which will cause acute illness in celiac
patients. Potential source of gluten contamination in pharmaceuticals come primarily
from excipients (i.e Wheat starch is occasionally used as an excipient in the formulation of medicinal tablets and
capsules in variety of functions, as a diluents, a disintegrant, a glidant or
as a binder). However there is currently
no regulatory guidance in place on the acceptable levels of gluten in medicinal
products.
Despite few pharmaceuticals are
labelled as gluten free, the great majority of drug manufactures do not specify
on the product label information regarding gluten content. A great concern
comes from the generic drugs which may not contain the same excipients as the
brand product.
Declaration of gluten in
pharmaceuticals is very important task required for display the gluten status
of the product, as the absence of gluten remains the only treatment for celiac
patients.
Thanks, for such a great post. I have tried and found it really helpful. For more details to visit Glidant
ReplyDeleteIt's really most important article, for more visit stearic acid manufacturers
ReplyDelete