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Landmark Ruling: Top Court in India Rejects Novartis Drug Patent

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Patent’s Defeat in India Is Key Victory for Generic Drugs
By Gardiner Harris
The New York Times
April 1, 2013


NEW DELHI — India’s Supreme Court rejected a patent application by Novartis for a major cancer drug on Monday, in a landmark ruling that will permit poor patients continued access to many of the world’s best medicines, at least for a while.

The ruling allows Indian makers of generic drugs to continue making copycat versions of the drug Gleevec — also spelled Glivec in Europe and elsewhere — which provides such a miraculous cure for some forms of leukemia that the Food and Drug Administration approved the medicine in the United States in 2001 in record time.

But the ruling’s effect will be felt well beyond the limited number of leukemia patients in India who need Gleevec, made by Switzerland-based Novartis. On the one hand, it will help maintain India’s role as the world’s most important provider of cheap medicines, which is critical in the global fight against HIV/AIDS and other diseases. Gleevec can cost up $70,000 per year, while Indian generic versions cost about $2,500 a year.

“India, being the pharmacy capital of the world, can continue to produce affordable, high-quality medicines without the threat of patents for minor modifications of known medicines,” Dr. Yusuf K. Hamied, chairman of Cipla, an Indian generic drug giant, wrote in an e-mail.

On the other hand, the ruling could cost lives in the future. Drug company executives and others argue that India’s failure to grant patents for critical medicines – and Gleevec is widely recognized as one of the most important medical discoveries in decades – is a shortsighted strategy that undermines a vital system for funding new discoveries.

In a televised interview, Ranjit Shahani, vice chairman of Novartis’s Indian subsidiary, said that companies like Novartis would invest less money in research in India as a result of the ruling. “We hope that the ecosystem for intellectual property in the country improves,” he said.

The case grapples with the contention that rich nations, increasingly reliant on the creation of idea-based products like computer programs and medicines, require poorer countries to pay for their ideas. Some countries – particularly India, Brazil and China – have begun to challenge the price they must pay, especially when the idea-based products are lifesaving medicines that their people desperately need.

The question is how to pay for ideas in ways that maximize their use while encouraging their creation, two sometimes contradictory goals. Poor countries have tended to focus on the immediate issue of access while tending to ignore the more uncertain and far-off issue of innovation, while the United States has long emphasized the need to finance new discoveries rather than provide access to medicines for all.

India exports about $10 billion worth of generic medicine every year, more than any other country. India and China together produce more than 80 percent of the active ingredients of all drugs used in the United States.

In Monday’s decision, India’s Supreme Court ruled that the patent that Novartis sought for Gleevec did not represent a true invention. The ruling is something of a historic anomaly. Passed under international pressure, India’s 2005 patent law for the first time allowed for patents on medicines, but only for drugs discovered after 1995. In 1993, Novartis patented a version of Gleevec that it later abandoned in development, but the Indian judges ruled that the early and later versions were not different enough for the later one to merit a separate patent.

Leena Menghaney, a patient advocate at Doctors Without Borders, said that the ruling is a reprieve from more expensive medicines, but only for a while.

“The great thing about this ruling is that we don’t have to worry about the drugs we’re currently using,” Ms. Menghaney said. “But the million-dollar question is what is going to happen for new drugs that have not yet come out.”

Anand Grover, a lawyer who argued the case on behalf of Cancer Patients Aid Association in India, said the ruling had a sweeping effect since it confirmed that India has a very high bar for approving patents on medicines.

“What is happening in the United States is that a lot of money is being wasted on new forms of old drugs,” Mr. Grover said. Because of Monday’s ruling, “that will not happen in India.”

Indeed, the vast majority of drug patents given in the United States are for tiny changes that often provide patients few meaningful benefits but allow drug companies to continue charging high prices for years beyond the original patent life.

In a classic example, AstraZeneca extended for years its franchise around the huge-selling heartburn pill, Prilosec, by performing a bit of chemical wizardry and renaming the medicine Nexium. Amgen has won so many patents on its hugely expensive erythropoietin-stimulating drugs that the company has maintained exclusive sales rights for 24 years, double the usual period.

One result is that the United States pays the highest drug prices in the world, prices that only a tiny fraction could afford in India, where more than two-thirds of the population lives on less than $2 a day. While advocates for the pharmaceutical industry argue that fairly liberal rules on patents spur innovation, academics are far from united in sharing that view.

But as the economies of emerging markets grow, their refusal to pay higher premiums for newer drugs could significantly reduce the money needed for innovation. The drug industry makes nearly two-thirds of its profits in the United States, a dependence that many in the industry fear is unsustainable. And even minor improvements in medicines – making a pill once-a-day instead of twice-a-day – can have significant impacts on patient wellness, industry executives say.

The United States government has become increasingly insistent in recent years that other countries adopt far more stringent patent protection rules, with the result that poorer patients often lose access to cheap generic copies of medicines when their governments undertake trade agreements with the United States.

Drug companies have relied on the American government to lobby on the issue because they have few tools to punish India and other countries. If the companies decide not to introduce high-priced drugs in India, the country could legalize generic copies under international law. And with major drug makers cutting back on research budgets anyway, large investments in research infrastructure may be unlikely even if countries adopt patent laws more amenable to the industry.
 
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I encourage everyone to go to the bottom of the original article and read the comments section, especially 'Reader Picks' and 'NYT (Editor's) Picks'

Just a few of the ones I found to be good:


There is something so unethical about profiting on life saving drugs. I know billions go into research but haven't we progressed far enough as a race to not ask for twice or three times much in returns. Shouldn't helping people survive be enough? Dark Ages redux, thanks to the market economy.
Intheknow
Staten Island

This is what can happen when the courts are not controlled by the Koch brothers!
RMarc
Albany, NY

Low cost, generic anti-retroviral drugs, primarily from India, have saved millions of lives in Africa despite big pharma fighting all the way to keep this from happening - enough said.
Walter F. Schlech, MD, MACP
Halifax, NS, Canada

I am really shocked with the lack of sensitivity from the Indian authorities with this blatant piracy act against the giant multinationals! I wonder if the Indian officials are not ashamed to know that their abject copies can prevent the multinational pharmaceutical executives to afford their deserved yacht tours through the Mediterranean and the Caribbean!
Little Panda
Celestial Heaven


but overall very well done to the Indian court. this will ensure that lives of poor people across the world continue to be saved, whilst putting large corporate executives in their place for the time being.
 
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I still am on the fence about this. Intellectual properties, copyrights must be observed . If they did not spend the money in the first place, coming up with it- would you have the ability to copy it?
 
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I still am on the fence about this. Intellectual properties, copyrights must be observed . If they did not spend the money in the first place, coming up with it- would you have the ability to copy it?

Not in this case, this is about "ever-greening", used by Pharma companies to extend patents well after they expire by making small changes to drugs scheduled to come off patents. Indian patent law has now been confirmed by this SC ruling that while new innovations will get protections, minute modifications won't be used as an excuse to increase period of protection.
 
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We should ignore what other countries have to say about this...This was a necessary step to save millions of lives...Imagine if polio vaccine was patented by it's inventor...he would have made billions but billions would have died...

Not in this case, this is about "ever-greening", used by Pharma companies to extend patents well after they expire by making small changes to drugs scheduled to come off patents. Indian patent law has no been confirmed by this SC ruling that while new innovations will get protections, minute modifications won't be used as an excuse to increase period of protection.

Exactly...These companies make minuscule changes and claim new patent for this...This is day light robbery and insensitive to say the least...
 
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We should ignore what other countries have to say about this...This was a necessary step to save millions of lives..

We don't have to ignore anything. There is nothing to be defensive about in this ruling. It sets a higher bar for pharma companies than in the U.S. & Europe but ever-greening is under fire there too. My own feeling is that a lot of countries, especially developing ones are going to take a very close look at our patent law and will come under pressure from aid groups & people in general (Opposite pressure can be expected from big Pharma, backed by U.S. & Europe) to adopt Indian style patent law.
 
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I still am on the fence about this. Intellectual properties, copyrights must be observed . If they did not spend the money in the first place, coming up with it- would you have the ability to copy it?

Had this been in favour of the pharma company,the cancer drug would have cost 1.2 lakh indian rupee,where as indian companies sell the same thing now for rs8000.

I still am on the fence about this. Intellectual properties, copyrights must be observed . If they did not spend the money in the first place, coming up with it- would you have the ability to copy it?

Had this been in favour of the pharma company,the cancer drug would have cost Rs1.2 lakh ,where as indian companies sell and export the same thing now for Rs 8000.
 
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Had this been in favour of the pharma company,the cancer drug would have cost 1.2 lakh indian rupee,where as indian companies sell the same thing now for rs8000.
It generally takes around 15 years for a drug to Complete the three phases of a clinical trial and for every 100 drugs starting phase I trial, only one or two get FDA approval for marketing.The R&D of a single drug is generally ranges up to several hundred millions USD. Patent laws are restricted for upto 20-30 years. So the company has only a few years (20-time to develop drug) to recover the funding spend on R&D.

The generic Companies like Cipla Just reap the benefits from the work done by others.
That is why Pharmas resort to Ever greening practice. It is a grossly Unfair world. :)
 
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I still am on the fence about this. Intellectual properties, copyrights must be observed . If they did not spend the money in the first place, coming up with it- would you have the ability to copy it?

Source: http://www.defence.pk/forums/world-...jects-novartis-drug-patent.html#ixzz2PH7OMoXt


I dont think we are copying anything here. According to our law Indian companies can obtain a licence from the original inventor and manufacture the drug in India. I dont think there is an issue of intellectual property theft in this case . There is something called "compulsory licensing" in India.
Also most of these research on drugs are funded by government .
 
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It generally takes around 15 years for a drug to Complete the three phases of a clinical trial and for every 100 drugs starting phase I trial, only one or two get FDA approval for marketing.The R&D of a single drug is generally ranges up to several hundred millions USD. Patent laws are restricted for upto 20-30 years. So the company has only a few years (20-time to develop drug) to recover the funding spend on R&D.

The generic Companies like Cipla Just reap the benefits from the work done by others.
That is why Pharmas resort to Ever greening practice. It is a grossly Unfair world. :)
Dude if its so............then how could Novartis sell some of their Patent Expired products cheaper in India than there generic version..............
 
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It generally takes around 15 years for a drug to Complete the three phases of a clinical trial and for every 100 drugs starting phase I trial, only one or two get FDA approval for marketing.The R&D of a single drug is generally ranges up to several hundred millions USD. Patent laws are restricted for upto 20-30 years. So the company has only a few years (20-time to develop drug) to recover the funding spend on R&D.

The generic Companies like Cipla Just reap the benefits from the work done by others.

Source: http://www.defence.pk/forums/world-...jects-novartis-drug-patent.html#ixzz2PH9VEmJE

Drug companies can still get a healthy amount through license.
 
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I encourage everyone to go to the bottom of the original article and read the comments section, especially 'Reader Picks' and 'NYT (Editor's) Picks'

Just a few of the ones I found to be good:


There is something so unethical about profiting on life saving drugs. I know billions go into research but haven't we progressed far enough as a race to not ask for twice or three times much in returns. Shouldn't helping people survive be enough? Dark Ages redux, thanks to the market economy.
Intheknow
Staten Island


Low cost, generic anti-retroviral drugs, primarily from India, have saved millions of lives in Africa despite big pharma fighting all the way to keep this from happening - enough said.
I am really shocked with the lack of sensitivity from the Indian authorities with this blatant piracy act against the giant multinationals! I wonder if the Indian officials are not ashamed to know that their abject copies can prevent the multinational pharmaceutical executives to afford their deserved yacht tours through the Mediterranean and the Caribbean!
Little Panda
Celestial Heaven



but overall very well done to the Indian court. this will ensure that lives of poor people across the world continue to be saved, whilst putting large corporate executives in their place for the time being.​


There is no doubt that whoever makes the medicines & spends on its research must get his due.

The diff in prices between Clevit & its generic version indicates the amount they were making. Those with cancer would do anything for help.

I feel making such huge profits is exploitation . The Indian court has done a humungous job .

Good show .​
 
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What an intellect....crime when committed by self was necessary.

We should ignore what other countries have to say about this...This was a necessary step to save millions of lives...Imagine if polio vaccine was patented by it's inventor...he would have made billions but billions would have died...



Exactly...These companies make minuscule changes and claim new patent for this...This is day light robbery and insensitive to say the least...
 
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its hard to say. on one hand im happy on the other i can understand the big companies thinking this way.
 
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For those who are not aware, patents for any medicine formulas are valid for a total period of twenty years from the date they are first patented, after the expiry of this period any pharmaceutical company can make the same drug and market it, there is however another legal technicality. Normally all pharmaceutical companies register the brand name for their medicine which remains their property even after expiry of formula patent. Hence other companies, though are free to make the same drug but they can not use the original brand name to market it.

Indian supreme court has now set a new low by allowing indian copy caters to market the drug using the same registered brand name. An illegal and unethical move in my opinion.



We should ignore what other countries have to say about this...This was a necessary step to save millions of lives...Imagine if polio vaccine was patented by it's inventor...he would have made billions but billions would have died...

Exactly...These companies make minuscule changes and claim new patent for this...This is day light robbery and insensitive to say the least...

Wrong, if the companies have made miniscule changes and patented the new formula, then copy caters should copy the previous formula not the new one, and besides as you said the miniscule changes should not affect the healing properties of the medicine.
 
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