What went wrong with a rabies vaccine batch?


What Went Wrong with a Rabies Vaccine Batch? — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Vaccine name Abhayrab (human anti-rabies vaccine, PVRV type)
Manufacturer Indian Immunologicals Limited (IIL)
Parent body of IIL National Dairy Development Board (NDDB), Govt. of India
Nature of problem Counterfeit (spurious) batch; not a manufacturing defect by IIL
Circulation start On/after November 1, 2023
CDC alert date November 25, 2025
IIL corrective statement date December 27, 2025
Regulatory authority (India) CDSCO (Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation) under MoHFW
Batch release body Central Drugs Laboratory (CDL), Kasauli, Himachal Pradesh
CDL accreditation WHO-Geneva pre-qualified laboratory under India's NRA
Governing Act Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940; Drugs and Cosmetics Rules, 1945
PEP protocol (WHO) 4–5 doses over 14–28 days (IM), with/without RIG depending on exposure
Rabies fatality rate ~100% once encephalitic symptoms appear
India's rabies burden ~36% of global rabies deaths (WHO estimate)

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Scientific / Technological

Governance / Administrative

Legal / Constitutional

Social

Economic

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. Abhayrab is a Purified Vero Cell Rabies Vaccine (PVRV) manufactured by Indian Immunologicals Limited (IIL).
  2. IIL is a subsidiary of the National Dairy Development Board (NDDB) — a Government of India undertaking.
  3. Every vaccine batch in India must be released by the Central Drugs Laboratory (CDL), Kasauli before market entry.
  4. CDL, Kasauli is WHO-Geneva pre-qualified under India's National Regulatory Authority (NRA) framework.
  5. The CDC issued its travel notice on November 25, 2025, specifically naming counterfeit Abhayrab.
  6. ATAGI (Australian Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation) declared Abhayrab doses administered after November 1, 2023 as potentially invalid.
  7. Manufacture/sale of spurious drugs under Section 17B of the Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940 carries a minimum 10-year prison sentence.
  8. India bears approximately 36% of global rabies deaths annually (WHO estimate).
  9. CDSCO (Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation) under the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare is India's apex drug regulator.
  10. Rabies is virtually 100% fatal once clinical (encephalitic) symptoms manifest.
  11. The WHO-recommended PEP schedule for rabies is 4–5 intramuscular doses over 14–28 days, potentially with Rabies Immunoglobulin (RIG) for severe exposures.
  12. The counterfeit problem was first flagged internationally by authorities in Australia and the United States — not India's domestic surveillance system.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-II Government policies and interventions for development; health sector governance; issues relating to regulatory bodies
GS-III Science and Technology — indigenisation, biotechnology; pharmaceutical sector
GS-IV Ethics in public administration — accountability of institutions, whistleblowing, transparency

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "The counterfeit Abhayrab rabies vaccine episode exposed systemic gaps in India's post-market drug surveillance framework. Critically examine the regulatory architecture under the Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940, and suggest structural reforms." (GS-II)
  2. "India manufactures a significant share of the world's vaccines yet faces credibility challenges due to spurious drug circulation. Analyse the dual federal structure of drug regulation as a contributing factor and propose a path forward." (GS-II/GS-III)
  3. "Evaluate the ethical obligations of public sector vaccine manufacturers and regulatory bodies when a counterfeit of a life-saving product enters the market." (GS-IV)

9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940 The primary statutory framework governing spurious drug offences in this episode
CDSCO and Drug Regulation in India The apex body whose surveillance gap is implicated in the two-year delay
National Action Plan for Dog-Mediated Rabies Elimination (NAPRE) India's 2030 target for eliminating human rabies; connects to PEP access and quality
Pharmacovigilance Programme of India (PvPI) Should have detected AEFI signals earlier; its gaps are directly relevant
WHO Prequalification Programme CDL Kasauli's WHO-PQ status; understand what it covers and does not cover
Consumer Protection Act, 2019 Product liability dimension for patients who received counterfeit doses
One Health Framework Rabies is a zoonotic disease; its control requires veterinary + human health coordination
India's Vaccine Manufacturing Ecosystem IIL, SII, Bharat Biotech — export credibility and domestic quality assurance

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing IIL with the counterfeiter: The counterfeit was not manufactured by IIL — it was a third-party spurious product impersonating IIL's brand. IIL's own batch release process (via CDL) was not the failure point.
  2. Confusing CDL Kasauli with CDSCO: CDL (Central Drugs Laboratory, Kasauli) is the batch-testing laboratory; CDSCO is the regulatory authority — they are distinct institutions under MoH&FW.
  3. Assuming the problem was a manufacturing defect: This was a supply chain / distribution layer failure (counterfeiting), not a lapse in IIL's manufacturing quality management.
  4. Wrong parent ministry for IIL: IIL's parent is NDDB (under Ministry of Fisheries, Animal Husbandry & Dairying), not the Ministry of Health — a common trick question.
  5. Thinking ATAGI is an Indian body: ATAGI = Australian Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation. The Indian equivalents are NTAGI (National Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation) under MoH&FW.

11. Sources

Note: Web searches were blocked by domain-access restrictions during this session. This note is grounded entirely in the article content (Tier 4 primary source) supplemented by established WHO/regulatory framework knowledge. All regulatory facts (CDL, CDSCO, Drugs and Cosmetics Act, WHO-PQ) are verifiable at who.int and pib.gov.in.