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India reject gilead hepatitis c drug patent from US base science Gilead drug company

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India rejects Gilead's Hepatitis C drug patent request

By Sumeet Chatterjee1 hour ago

By Sumeet Chatterjee

MUMBAI (Reuters) - India's patent office has rejected an application from U.S.-based Gilead Sciences Inc for its hepatitis C drug Sovaldi, paving the way for local drugmakers to launch cheaper generic versions of the $1,000-a-pill medicine.

The application had been opposed by Indian generic drugmaker Natco Pharma Ltd and New York-based Initiative for Medicines, Access & Knowledge (I-MAK) on the grounds that the drug, chemically called sofosbuvir, is not inventive enough compared with a previous formulation, according to patent office order documents seen by Reuters on Wednesday.

India's patent laws allow a third party to dispute the validity of a pending patent application.

The patent office's order said Gilead's request for Sovaldi, which is normally given for either three or six months and costs $84,000 for a 12-week course in the United States, was rejected on the basis that "minor changes in the molecule" did not improve efficacy of the drug.

The rejection will allow the Indian generic companies to make and sell versions of the drug in country where a majority of people live on less than $2 a day and health insurance is scarce.

Gilead could not immediately be reached for comment. Natco Chief Executive Rajeev Nannapaneni was not available outside regular Indian business hours.

Foreign drugmakers in India, a global hub for making generic drugs, have been frustrated by a series of decisions on patents and pricing, with the government looking to improve healthcare access.

Market access and patent protection for U.S. drugs are expected to feature when Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi hosts President Barack Obama later this month for India's annual Republic Day celebrations.

The patent office's order comes amid a growing clamor by healthcare campaigners and doctors to ensure Sovaldi and other new hepatitis C pills are affordable in developing countries.

In a bid to make Sovaldi available in 91 developing nations including in India, Gilead licensed the drug, hailed by doctors as a breakthrough in treating the liver-destroying disease, to seven India-based drugmakers in April last year.

Campaigners, however, were critical of the licensing deals, saying they would not ensure access to several middle-income countries where health authorities would still struggle to provide treatment to patients.
 
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Patent violation by India drug industry, just because India couldn't afford the drug from the US, India can't just stole from the US to produce the generic drug to sell to the Indian. I thought India high court protect the copyright law. They should force India to pay the patent fee to the US drug compay.

Shameless people
 
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Patent violation by India drug industry, just because India couldn't afford the drug from the US, India can't just stole from the US to produce the generic drug to sell to the Indian. I thought India high court protect the copyright law. They should force India to pay the patent fee to the US drug compay.

Shameless people

tomorrow if they say, doing sex in doggstyle is a patent of US and you need license for doing it, people like you will surely get the license!

Crap with this patent thing, just a way to maintain monopoly.
 
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classic case of false flag.rest its a court decision, hire a better lawyer .
 
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Freaking India court only enforce the law benefit the Indian stole from the US company.
 
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India never stole or violate copyright from any country. Hypocrite people on this planet.
 
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Patent violation by India drug industry, just because India couldn't afford the drug from the US, India can't just stole from the US to produce the generic drug to sell to the Indian. I thought India high court protect the copyright law. They should force India to pay the patent fee to the US drug compay.

Shameless people

Take a sugarcane and sit on it.
 
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A law should never be partial or bias, when a court enforce any patent law the court should apply to all on the equal basis, can just pick and choose to which patent product India court to decide to enforce. A farce justice system pick and choose to be impartial to benefit it own people.

Take a sugarcane and sit on it.




No just because a drug too expensive for the Indian to pay for, India can't just stole the patent from other nation to provide the drug treatment for the Indian. India court force other country to pay the copyright fee if a copy product sale in India.
 
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A law should never be partial or bias, when a court enforce any patent law the court should apply to all on the equal basis, can just pick and choose to which patent product India court to decide to enforce. A farce justice system pick and choose to be impartial to benefit it own people.






No just because a drug too expensive for the Indian to pay for, India can't just stole the patent from other nation to provide the drug treatment for the Indian. India court force other country to pay the copyright fee if a copy product sale in India.

Okay take a pole then.
 
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"Foreign drugmakers in India, a global hub for making generic drugs, have been frustrated by a series of decisions on patents and pricing, with the government looking to improve healthcare access."

It is another chapter in the vicious circle which may lead to foreign pharma companies to completely shutting down the Indian market and then the flourishing of pirate drugs with doubtful efficacy on Indian patients who are often used as guinea pigs for drug tests.
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Indians backstabbed USA after speaking kind words. Nobody is surprised. Now USA will give India another humiliation like 1971.
 
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