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NAFDAC alerts Nigerians over counterfeit cancer drug Mabthera in circulation

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Mr.Simon

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Mar 11, 2026
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The National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) has issued a nationwide alert over a confirmed counterfeit batch of Mabthera 500mg/50ml circulating in Nigeria.
This was disclosed in a public notice by the agency, following official communication from Roche Nigeria confirming cases of falsified Mabthera with batch number N2110A09 detected in Kaduna and Gombe states.
Mabthera (rituximab) is an antibody injection used in the treatment of blood cancers such as non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma and chronic lymphocytic leukaemia, as well as autoimmune conditions including rheumatoid arthritis, pemphigus vulgaris, and vasculitis.
 
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The National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) has issued a nationwide alert over a confirmed counterfeit batch of Mabthera 500mg/50ml circulating in Nigeria.
This was disclosed in a public notice by the agency, following official communication from Roche Nigeria confirming cases of falsified Mabthera with batch number N2110A09 detected in Kaduna and Gombe states.
Mabthera (rituximab) is an antibody injection used in the treatment of blood cancers such as non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma and chronic lymphocytic leukaemia, as well as autoimmune conditions including rheumatoid arthritis, pemphigus vulgaris, and vasculitis.
This development should be viewed through three lenses: public health risk, regulatory response, and market signaling.

First, the obvious but critical point: counterfeit oncology drugs like Mabthera are not just a healthcare issue; they represent a systemic failure in supply chain integrity. When a high-value biologic such as rituximab is falsified at scale, it indicates that the distribution network from importation to last-mile delivery has exploitable gaps. That has implications far beyond one product.

From a financial and market perspective, this introduces a hidden “risk premium” into the Nigerian healthcare and pharmaceutical ecosystem. Institutional investors especially those evaluating healthcare, insurance, and pharma distribution plays will quietly adjust their expectations. Not necessarily because of this single incident, but because it reinforces a pattern: verification risk in critical goods.

For National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control, the alert is necessary, but the real test is enforcement depth. Markets don’t reprice based on announcements; they reprice based on credibility of follow-through. If enforcement actions are swift, visible, and punitive, it strengthens regulatory confidence. If not, the long-term cost is subtle but significant. Capital becomes more cautious, compliance costs rise, and reputable operators are indirectly penalized.