Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
Search in posts
Search in pages
Filter by Categories
15th National Conference of the IAOMFP, Chennai, 2006
Abstract
Abstracts from current literature
Acne in India: Guidelines for management - IAA Consensus Document
Addendum
Announcement
Art & Psychiatry
Article
Articles
Association Activities
Association Notes
Award Article
Book Review
Brief Report
Case Analysis
Case Letter
Case Letters
Case Notes
Case Report
Case Reports
Clinical and Laboratory Investigations
Clinical Article
Clinical Studies
Clinical Study
Commentary
Conference Oration
Conference Summary
Continuing Medical Education
Correspondence
Corrigendum
Cosmetic Dermatology
Cosmetology
Current Best Evidence
Current Issue
Current View
Derma Quest
Dermato Surgery
Dermatopathology
Dermatosurgery Specials
Dispensing Pearl
Do you know?
Drug Dialogues
e-IJDVL
Editor Speaks
Editorial
Editorial Remarks
Editorial Report
Editorial Report - 2007
Editorial report for 2004-2005
Errata
Erratum
Focus
Fourth All India Conference Programme
From Our Book Shelf
From the Desk of Chief Editor
General
Get Set for Net
Get set for the net
Guest Article
Guest Editorial
History
How I Manage?
IADVL Announcement
IADVL Announcements
IJDVL Awards
IJDVL AWARDS 2015
IJDVL Awards 2018
IJDVL Awards 2019
IJDVL Awards 2020
IJDVL International Awards 2018
Images in Clinical Practice
Images in Dermatology
In Memorium
Inaugural Address
Index
Knowledge From World Contemporaries
Leprosy Section
Letter in Response to Previous Publication
Letter to Editor
Letter to the Editor
Letter to the Editor - Case Letter
Letter to the Editor - Letter in Response to Published Article
LETTER TO THE EDITOR - LETTERS IN RESPONSE TO PUBLISHED ARTICLES
Letter to the Editor - Observation Letter
Letter to the Editor - Study Letter
Letter to the Editor - Therapy Letter
Letter to the Editor: Articles in Response to Previously Published Articles
Letters in Response to Previous Publication
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the Editor - Letter in Response to Previously Published Articles
Letters to the Editor: Case Letters
Letters to the Editor: Letters in Response to Previously Published Articles
Media and news
Medicolegal Window
Messages
Miscellaneous Letter
Musings
Net Case
Net case report
Net Image
Net Images
Net Letter
Net Quiz
Net Study
New Preparations
News
News & Views
Obituary
Observation Letter
Observation Letters
Oration
Original Article
ORIGINAL CONTRIBUTION
Original Contributions
Pattern of Skin Diseases
Pearls
Pediatric Dermatology
Pediatric Rounds
Perspective
Presedential Address
Presidential Address
Presidents Remarks
Quiz
Recommendations
Regret
Report
Report of chief editor
Report of Hon : Treasurer IADVL
Report of Hon. General Secretary IADVL
Research Methdology
Research Methodology
Resident page
Resident's Page
Resident’s Page
Residents' Corner
Residents' Corner
Residents' Page
Retraction
Review
Review Article
Review Articles
Reviewers 2022
Revision Corner
Self Assessment Programme
SEMINAR
Seminar: Chronic Arsenicosis in India
Seminar: HIV Infection
Short Communication
Short Communications
Short Report
Snippets
Special Article
Specialty Interface
Studies
Study Letter
Study Letters
Supplement-Photoprotection
Supplement-Psoriasis
Symposium - Contact Dermatitis
Symposium - Lasers
Symposium - Pediatric Dermatoses
Symposium - Psoriasis
Symposium - Vesicobullous Disorders
SYMPOSIUM - VITILIGO
Symposium Aesthetic Surgery
Symposium Dermatopathology
Symposium-Hair Disorders
Symposium-Nails Part I
Symposium-Nails-Part II
Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses
Systematic Reviews and Meta-analysis
Tables
Technology
Therapeutic Guideline-IADVL
Therapeutic Guidelines
Therapeutic Guidelines - IADVL
Therapeutics
Therapy
Therapy Letter
Therapy Letters
View Point
Viewpoint
What’s new in Dermatology
Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
Search in posts
Search in pages
Filter by Categories
15th National Conference of the IAOMFP, Chennai, 2006
Abstract
Abstracts from current literature
Acne in India: Guidelines for management - IAA Consensus Document
Addendum
Announcement
Art & Psychiatry
Article
Articles
Association Activities
Association Notes
Award Article
Book Review
Brief Report
Case Analysis
Case Letter
Case Letters
Case Notes
Case Report
Case Reports
Clinical and Laboratory Investigations
Clinical Article
Clinical Studies
Clinical Study
Commentary
Conference Oration
Conference Summary
Continuing Medical Education
Correspondence
Corrigendum
Cosmetic Dermatology
Cosmetology
Current Best Evidence
Current Issue
Current View
Derma Quest
Dermato Surgery
Dermatopathology
Dermatosurgery Specials
Dispensing Pearl
Do you know?
Drug Dialogues
e-IJDVL
Editor Speaks
Editorial
Editorial Remarks
Editorial Report
Editorial Report - 2007
Editorial report for 2004-2005
Errata
Erratum
Focus
Fourth All India Conference Programme
From Our Book Shelf
From the Desk of Chief Editor
General
Get Set for Net
Get set for the net
Guest Article
Guest Editorial
History
How I Manage?
IADVL Announcement
IADVL Announcements
IJDVL Awards
IJDVL AWARDS 2015
IJDVL Awards 2018
IJDVL Awards 2019
IJDVL Awards 2020
IJDVL International Awards 2018
Images in Clinical Practice
Images in Dermatology
In Memorium
Inaugural Address
Index
Knowledge From World Contemporaries
Leprosy Section
Letter in Response to Previous Publication
Letter to Editor
Letter to the Editor
Letter to the Editor - Case Letter
Letter to the Editor - Letter in Response to Published Article
LETTER TO THE EDITOR - LETTERS IN RESPONSE TO PUBLISHED ARTICLES
Letter to the Editor - Observation Letter
Letter to the Editor - Study Letter
Letter to the Editor - Therapy Letter
Letter to the Editor: Articles in Response to Previously Published Articles
Letters in Response to Previous Publication
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the Editor - Letter in Response to Previously Published Articles
Letters to the Editor: Case Letters
Letters to the Editor: Letters in Response to Previously Published Articles
Media and news
Medicolegal Window
Messages
Miscellaneous Letter
Musings
Net Case
Net case report
Net Image
Net Images
Net Letter
Net Quiz
Net Study
New Preparations
News
News & Views
Obituary
Observation Letter
Observation Letters
Oration
Original Article
ORIGINAL CONTRIBUTION
Original Contributions
Pattern of Skin Diseases
Pearls
Pediatric Dermatology
Pediatric Rounds
Perspective
Presedential Address
Presidential Address
Presidents Remarks
Quiz
Recommendations
Regret
Report
Report of chief editor
Report of Hon : Treasurer IADVL
Report of Hon. General Secretary IADVL
Research Methdology
Research Methodology
Resident page
Resident's Page
Resident’s Page
Residents' Corner
Residents' Corner
Residents' Page
Retraction
Review
Review Article
Review Articles
Reviewers 2022
Revision Corner
Self Assessment Programme
SEMINAR
Seminar: Chronic Arsenicosis in India
Seminar: HIV Infection
Short Communication
Short Communications
Short Report
Snippets
Special Article
Specialty Interface
Studies
Study Letter
Study Letters
Supplement-Photoprotection
Supplement-Psoriasis
Symposium - Contact Dermatitis
Symposium - Lasers
Symposium - Pediatric Dermatoses
Symposium - Psoriasis
Symposium - Vesicobullous Disorders
SYMPOSIUM - VITILIGO
Symposium Aesthetic Surgery
Symposium Dermatopathology
Symposium-Hair Disorders
Symposium-Nails Part I
Symposium-Nails-Part II
Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses
Systematic Reviews and Meta-analysis
Tables
Technology
Therapeutic Guideline-IADVL
Therapeutic Guidelines
Therapeutic Guidelines - IADVL
Therapeutics
Therapy
Therapy Letter
Therapy Letters
View Point
Viewpoint
What’s new in Dermatology
View/Download PDF

Translate this page into:

Letter to the Editor - Observation Letter
2019:85:1;104-106
doi: 10.4103/ijdvl.IJDVL_22_18
PMID: 30504534

Surrogate advertisement of a super-potent corticosteroid-containing cream: An alarming development and a cautionary tale of its consequences

Abir Saraswat1 , Rajetha Damisetty2
1 Indushree Skin Clinic, Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh, India
2 Mohana Skin and Hair Clinic, Hyderabad, Telangana, India

Correspondence Address:
Abir Saraswat
Indushree Skin Clinic, B-7, Indira Nagar, Lucknow - 226 016, Uttar Pradesh
India
Published: 30-Nov-2018
How to cite this article:
Saraswat A, Damisetty R. Surrogate advertisement of a super-potent corticosteroid-containing cream: An alarming development and a cautionary tale of its consequences. Indian J Dermatol Venereol Leprol 2019;85:104-106
Copyright: (C)2019 Indian Journal of Dermatology, Venereology, and Leprology

Sir,

Topical corticosteroid misuse and the effects thereof have been a major challenge to Indian dermatologists in recent years. It has led to a deluge of patients with red face syndrome, steroid acne, skin atrophy and myriad other adverse effects.[1],[2],[3] The current outbreak of poorly responsive and widespread tinea has also been blamed on the misuse of fixed drug combination creams containing potent or super-potent corticosteroids.[4] Apart from this, two factors contributing to this misuse are: (a) the poor regulation of direct-to-consumer advertisements of drugs in India, and (b) the unrestricted availability of almost all topical and systemic drugs without a prescription. We report a recent case that exemplified these problems and starkly outlined how they can play havoc with the health of our patients.

A 5-year-old boy presented with a 10 cm annular, inflamed, itchy lesion surrounded by a hypopigmented halo on the left ankle of 2 months' duration. It started as an itchy papule that gradually enlarged over a week. At this time, the boy's father, a software engineer, went online and searched for possible remedies. After a brief internet search, he concluded that the boy had tinea and then came across the advertisement of a brand of antifungal cream. He studied the brand's ingredients on some other websites, concluded that it would be safe and effective and bought it from a local pharmacy. On applying this cream, the lesion initially improved slightly but started increasing in size later on. After 1 month of continuous use, it had enlarged considerably and the parents visited us.

On probing further, the following story emerged: The father had seen the advertisement of a popular cream called Ring Guard™ containing 2% miconazole nitrate. Because this brand was not available at a local pharmacy, another brand called Ring Out™ with exactly the same ingredient was offered to him. He immediately confirmed the active ingredient on his mobile phone, found it to be miconazole 2% and agreed to buy the offered alternative brand. He was then sold a cream called Ring Out+™, but he failed to notice the minor difference in brand name given the almost identical packaging. This particular brand contained clobetasol, neomycin and clotrimazole instead of miconazole, the use of which likely led to the exacerbation of tinea and surrounding hypopigmentation. On confronting the pharmacy salesperson, he claimed that Ring Out™ cream had been out of stock for a few months while Ring Out+™ had been introduced recently, and he had assumed that the latter was a newer version of the former with similar ingredients.

Self-medication by laypersons is a well-known phenomenon. Some self-medication is actually desirable, so that health care facilities are not overrun by patients with trivial complaints. However, safe self-medication is predicated on clear-cut guidelines for over-the-counter drug sale and strict oversight on advertisements. In a study on Indian housewives, it was found that topical agents were the third most commonly used drugs for self-medication after analgesics and antacids.[5]

We tend to associate topical steroid misuse with poorly educated patients who take wrong advice from friends, pharmacists, quacks or even qualified practitioners. In this case however, a highly educated man who was well aware of the problems associated with topical corticosteroids, who spent considerable time collecting medical and product information from the internet, and who cross-checked information given by the pharmacy salesperson still ended up applying a super-potent steroid on the skin of his 5-year-old son for more than a month. Some factors that led to this unfortunate outcome are discussed in brief below.

There is no clear-cut definition of over-the-counter medicines in Indian drug law. This term is not even mentioned in the Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940, or the Drugs and Cosmetics Rules, 1945.[6] There are lists such as schedule H, schedule H1 and schedule X which enumerate drugs that cannot be sold without a prescription, but adherence to these guidelines at pharmacies is extremely poor and many commonly used drugs are missing from schedule H. Corticosteroids are mentioned there, but can easily be bought without any prescription, as happened in this case. There are clear-cut rules that prohibit the direct-to-public advertising of schedule H drugs without the government's prior permission, but these are openly flouted[7]. Print and electronic media are flooded with completely unregulated advertisements of fixed drug combination creams containing potent and super-potent corticosteroids.

Although these issues are well known in Indian medical circles, there are more disturbing facts that came to our notice in this case. When searching online, it became clear that Ring Out™ cream was being advertised heavily on social media, TV channels and in print. However, exactly the same brand name was apparently available with two completely different sets of ingredients in the market. Ring Out™ cream was shown to contain miconazole 2% at the manufacturer's website,[8] whereas at several online pharmacies, the same cream was shown to contain beclomethasone, neomycin and clotrimazole.[9],[10] When we attempted to buy either version of the brand, we failed to find a single tube at any online pharmacy. Similarly, we drew a blank when we tried to buy it at physical pharmacies in five different cities all over India. The only way we could get a tube of this cream was by asking the manufacturer, who sent it by courier. We were informed by them that the triple-combination version had never existed, the brand had always contained miconazole 2%. The mention of the sold-out triple-agent Ring Out™ cream at several online pharmacies was allegedly due to human error.

Ring Out+™ cream, however, was easily available over the internet, even at general e-commerce websites without any prescription.[11] It was freely available in physical pharmacies as well, in an absolutely identical packaging to that of Ring Out™ [Figure - 1], albeit with the small “+” symbol. The unavailability of a heavily advertised brand and the easy availability of a very similar-looking and sounding one manufactured by the same company clearly marked this as a case of surrogate advertising. It also seemed that the same brand name Ring Out™ was somehow approved for marketing a corticosteroid–antifungal–antibacterial cream, as well as a miconazole cream.

Figure 1

Two profoundly worrying conclusions can be drawn from the above. One, the Indian pharma industry is going the way of the alcohol and tobacco industries by using surrogate advertising to fraudulently sell harmful products to a gullible public.[12] Two, there is something amiss in the drug regulatory setup in our country. Not only are irrational drug combinations approved for marketing, but similar-sounding brand names are approved for widely differing drugs/combinations. Most worryingly, pharmaceutical products bearing the same brand name seem to be in the market with two different sets of active ingredients. For the consumer, it means that buying the same brand name drug is no guarantee that the same active ingredient is being dispensed.

It is high time that a clear cut official over-the-counter drug category is created in our country, and direct-to-consumer advertisements of these drugs are strictly regulated. Drug regulatory authorities should also ensure that companies cannot alter the ingredients of their brands without having to substantially change the brand name; that very similar-sounding brand names are not approved at all, and that laws restricting advertisements of prescription-only drugs are properly enforced. If this is not done, it will become virtually impossible for patients to avoid therapeutic misadventures and accidents, as happened in the index case.

Declaration of patient consent

The authors certify that they have obtained all appropriate patient consent forms. In the form, the legal guardian has given his consent for images and other clinical information to be reported in the journal. The guardian understands that names and initials will not be published and due efforts will be made to conceal patient identity, but anonymity cannot be guaranteed.

Financial support and sponsorship

Nil.

Conflicts of interest

There are no conflicts of interest.

References
1.
Saraswat A, Lahiri K, Chatterjee M, Barua S, Coondoo A, Mittal A, et al. Topical corticosteroid abuse on the face: A prospective, multicenter study of dermatology outpatients. Indian J Dermatol Venereol Leprol 2011;77:160-6.
[Google Scholar]
2.
Sharma R, Abrol S, Wani M. Misuse of topical corticosteroids on facial skin. A study of 200 patients. J Dermatol Case Rep 2017;11:5-8.
[Google Scholar]
3.
Meena S, Gupta LK, Khare AK, Balai M, Mittal A, Mehta S, et al. Topical corticosteroids abuse: A clinical study of cutaneous adverse effects. Indian J Dermatol 2017;62:675.
[Google Scholar]
4.
Verma S. Steroid modified tinea. BMJ 2017;356:j973.
[Google Scholar]
5.
Kaushal J, Gupta MC, Jindal P, Verma S. Self-medication patterns and drug use behavior in housewives belonging to the middle income group in a city in Northern India. Indian J Community Med 2012;37:16-9.
[Google Scholar]
6.
Gupta MC. What are the legal aspects of over-the-counter sale of allopathic medicines? Indian J Clin Pract 2013;23:864-8.
[Google Scholar]
7.
New Delhi: Central Drugs Standard Control Organization. Available from: http://www.cdsco.nic.in/writereaddata/GSR%20176(E)%20dated%2011_03_2014.pdf. [Last accessed on 2018 Feb 06].
[Google Scholar]
8.
Available from: https://www.mankindpharma.com/product/otc. [Last accessed on 2018 Feb 06].
[Google Scholar]
9.
Available from: https://www. 1mg.com/drugs/ring-out-cream-346594. [Last accessed on 2018 Feb 06].
[Google Scholar]
10. [Google Scholar]
11.
Available from: https://www.flipkart.com/mankind-ring-out/p/itmewydjmqztutz8. [Last accessed on 2018 Feb 02].
[Google Scholar]
12.
Sushma C, Sharang C. Pan masala advertisements are surrogate for tobacco products. Indian J Cancer 2005;42:94-8.
[Google Scholar]

Fulltext Views
2,214

PDF downloads
1,988
Show Sections