New
Delhi: The Supreme Court on Monday rejected pharma giant Novartis AG’s
plea to preserve its patent over a life-saving cancer drug, Glivec,
drawing a huge sigh of relief from thousands of patients in India and in
dozens of developing countries as the fear of
an almost 15-fold escalation of drug costs receded. It is the biggest setback for multinational pharma companies, which have been denied patent protection for a series of life-saving drugs in recent years.
Invented in 1991, Glivec is a miracle cure for a type of blood cancer called chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). In this form of cancer, certain bone marrow cells go rogue and produce excessive white blood cells, causing mild fatigue and hip pain initially, but slipping into an out-of-control crisis of zooming platelet and white cell counts. It used to be fatal, but with Glivec, the survival rate is over 95%. Imanitib, the active component, is on the National Essential Drugs List in India.
India has an estimated 3 lakh CML patients, with 20,000 added every year. Glivec is sold by Novartis for about Rs 1.2 lakh per month. Indian manufacturers sell the same drug at a monthly cost of Rs 8,000. This was the reason why Novartis launched a seven-year-long legal battle to protect its patent on the drug. Novartis case: A victory for cheaper Indian medicines
New Delhi: Novartis, which reported a net profit of $9.6 billion in 2012 on sales of $57 billion, criticised the judgment. In a statement Ranjit Shahani, vice chairman and managing director, Novartis India said, “This ruling is a setback for patients that will hinder medical progress for diseases without effective treatment options.”
When the drug was first commercially sold in 2001, India was moving over from the old patent regime to a new one after signing the international trade and patent related agreements in 1995. The new patent law came into force in 2005. Novartis could not get a patent on Glivec as it dated from an earlier time when a different patent law prevailed. It tried but the patent tribunal rejected the claim in 2006.
After going through various appeals, Novartis ended up in the apex court pleading that a crucial section 3 (d) of the new patent law was not applicable to Glivec. This section says that just discovering a new form of a substance is not enough to grant a patent, if it does not enhance its “known efficacy”.
Novartis was arguing that a new “beta crystalline” form of Glivec is more effective and hence qualifies as a new invention, and hence should get patent protection.
The Supreme Court, in a 112-page analysis of all the claims and counter-arguments, disagreed. It said that the beta crystalline form was nothing new. It has always existed in the original amorphous form.
The landmark judgement means that Indian companies such as Natco and Cipla can continue making and selling Glivec, not only for India but to most third-world countries.
Monday’s Supreme Court judgment dims hopes for some other pharma giants fighting legal battles on patents. Pfizer's cancer drug Sutent and Roche's hepatitis C treatment Pegasys and Merck & Co's asthma treatment aerosol suspension formulation lost their patented status in India last year, decisions the companies are fighting to have reversed.
Many pharma giants are concentrating their legal fire-power on India because it is an $11 billion a year market growing at 13-14 percent annually. Equally important is that India has emerged as the ‘pharmacy of the world” selling over $26 billion worth of cheap generic (non-patent) drugs to most of the poor and still developing countries. It is estimated that about 80% of the HIV/AIDS patients in the developing world are surviving because of cheap Indian drugs.
an almost 15-fold escalation of drug costs receded. It is the biggest setback for multinational pharma companies, which have been denied patent protection for a series of life-saving drugs in recent years.
Invented in 1991, Glivec is a miracle cure for a type of blood cancer called chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). In this form of cancer, certain bone marrow cells go rogue and produce excessive white blood cells, causing mild fatigue and hip pain initially, but slipping into an out-of-control crisis of zooming platelet and white cell counts. It used to be fatal, but with Glivec, the survival rate is over 95%. Imanitib, the active component, is on the National Essential Drugs List in India.
India has an estimated 3 lakh CML patients, with 20,000 added every year. Glivec is sold by Novartis for about Rs 1.2 lakh per month. Indian manufacturers sell the same drug at a monthly cost of Rs 8,000. This was the reason why Novartis launched a seven-year-long legal battle to protect its patent on the drug. Novartis case: A victory for cheaper Indian medicines
New Delhi: Novartis, which reported a net profit of $9.6 billion in 2012 on sales of $57 billion, criticised the judgment. In a statement Ranjit Shahani, vice chairman and managing director, Novartis India said, “This ruling is a setback for patients that will hinder medical progress for diseases without effective treatment options.”
When the drug was first commercially sold in 2001, India was moving over from the old patent regime to a new one after signing the international trade and patent related agreements in 1995. The new patent law came into force in 2005. Novartis could not get a patent on Glivec as it dated from an earlier time when a different patent law prevailed. It tried but the patent tribunal rejected the claim in 2006.
After going through various appeals, Novartis ended up in the apex court pleading that a crucial section 3 (d) of the new patent law was not applicable to Glivec. This section says that just discovering a new form of a substance is not enough to grant a patent, if it does not enhance its “known efficacy”.
Novartis was arguing that a new “beta crystalline” form of Glivec is more effective and hence qualifies as a new invention, and hence should get patent protection.
The Supreme Court, in a 112-page analysis of all the claims and counter-arguments, disagreed. It said that the beta crystalline form was nothing new. It has always existed in the original amorphous form.
The landmark judgement means that Indian companies such as Natco and Cipla can continue making and selling Glivec, not only for India but to most third-world countries.
Monday’s Supreme Court judgment dims hopes for some other pharma giants fighting legal battles on patents. Pfizer's cancer drug Sutent and Roche's hepatitis C treatment Pegasys and Merck & Co's asthma treatment aerosol suspension formulation lost their patented status in India last year, decisions the companies are fighting to have reversed.
Many pharma giants are concentrating their legal fire-power on India because it is an $11 billion a year market growing at 13-14 percent annually. Equally important is that India has emerged as the ‘pharmacy of the world” selling over $26 billion worth of cheap generic (non-patent) drugs to most of the poor and still developing countries. It is estimated that about 80% of the HIV/AIDS patients in the developing world are surviving because of cheap Indian drugs.
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