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You may have to pay more for patented drugs
January 10, 2005
On December 27, 2004, the Government of India promulgated an ordinance
for introducing a product patent regime for pharmaceuticals from January
1, 2005. The Indian pharmaceutical industry has rapidly grown in the recent
years at double-digit growth rates. Now with the introduction of product
patents will this trend continue?
In this article we try and explore the challenges faced by the Indian
pharmaceutical companies in this new world order.
From process patents to product patents
The Indian Patent Act (1970) helped the pharmaceutical industry achieve
rapid growth rates. Only process patents were granted for medicines and
this helped the Indian pharmaceutical industry to reverse engineer patented
drug molecules.
Patent law: What the fine print says
Product patent regime comes in force
This made medicines available to India's largely poor population at very
low prices. It also helped homegrown pharmaceutical companies get a major
market share by displacing the multinational pharmaceutical companies
from the top slots.
India signed the Trade Related Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) Agreement
in 1994 and thus committed to adopt the product patent regime from January
1, 2005 when TRIPS came into force.
India had agreed to award product patents on 'new chemical entities'
that had patents in any of the patent co-operation countries on or before
January 1, 2005. As a result generics of drugs, which have been granted
product patents since 1995, will not be available in the Indian market
without the prior permission of the company, which has the patent.
Furthermore, the product patent would be granted for a period of twenty
years instead of the earlier process patent, which was granted for five
to seven years. Another major change is the fact that earlier the patent
owner had to prove that the patent had been violated, now the onus of
proving the non-violation of the patent lies with the accused.
The ordinance also allows for pre-grant opposition to the patent but
is vague about the same.
The Indian pharmaceutical industry has progressed over the years because
of its reverse engineering skills. With the shift from process patents
to product patents the future is for companies that are discovery based.
The patent regime created by the Indian Patents Act (1970) led to a situation
wherein efforts were directed towards the development of alternative processes
for drugs, which had been already invented and patented in various countries.
Very little effort went into developing new drugs. This has negatively
impacted the development of expertise required for developing new drugs.
Moreover, a reverse engineering company cannot become a drug discoverer
overnight.
The development and commercialisation of a new drug is a time consuming
and costly process. The development of a new drug can take 10-12 years,
right from inception to the marketing stage and cost around $500-600 million.
Not many Indian pharmaceutical companies can afford to spend this kind
of money.
Also the development of a new drug happens in various stages and at each
stage there is a chance that the development of the drug may have to be
stopped and the expenditure incurred till then, written off. This is the
biggest challenge facing the Indian pharmaceutical companies as of now.
And whether the Indian pharmaceutical companies have it in them to deal
with this scenario remains to be seen. Before the ordinance was promulgated
the top bosses of some of the Indian pharmaceutical companies had gone
on record criticizing the government's decision agreeing to adopt TRIPS
from 2005.
The Mailbox provision
Under TRIPS, countries that did not have a product patent regime in place
as on January 1, 1995, had to provide for a mailbox. Mailbox was essentially
a mechanism for accepting patent applications till a product patent regime
was actually put in place.
Pharma firms interested in getting a twenty-year patent on the sale of
there medicines were asked to mail in their applications and these applications
are opened. Both multinational and Indian pharma companies have already
filed for patents on their products.
The fate of these companies will be decided once the mailbox is opened
by the government and its starts processing the applications. It could
lead to a situation wherein after the mailbox is opened a drug could be
granted patent protection for twenty years in India, despite the fact
the patent having expired in the original country of filing.
Another point bothering the Indian pharma companies is the lack of clarity
on the final number of filings for product patents in the mailbox. If
an increasing number of drugs are granted patent protection this leaves
lesser drugs free to be genericised.
For instance, Eli Lilly's Cialis (a medicine which cures erectile dysfunction)
competes with more than ten branded generics. Once Eli Lilly gets the
patent other players will have to withdraw their branded generics from
the market.
On the other hand MNC pharma firms are worried because delays in getting
product patent protection for their drugs could lead to substantial loss
of revenue for them.
Generic drugs cannot be prevented from entering the market till product
patents are granted. Furthermore, the patents will be granted with prospective
effect leading to the innovator firm not being able to claim damages with
retrospective effect.
This point helps the Indian pharma companies to continue producing their
generics for the time being.
MNC pharma firms in India are listed on various stock exchanges and a
good part of their shareholding is publicly owned. In a product patent
regime where in the patented drug will generate high revenues, the MNC
pharma companies may not want to share it with their listed entities.
They might decide to launch their patented drugs through wholly owned
subsidiaries, leading to the listed MNC pharma companies getting only
a marketing commission for distributing the drugs.
Spurious drugs
Estimates suggest that spurious drugs constitute nearly 15 per cent to
25 per cent of the Indian pharmaceutical market. Efforts have been unsuccessfully
made in the past to counter this menace.
With product patents coming in, chances are that drugs, during their
patent period, would become more expensive. This might lead to more and
more spurious drugs coming into the market given the higher margins that
would be available during the patent period of the drug.
The spurious drugs could eat into the monopoly profits of the product
during its patent period. This can act a major disincentive for companies
to do research and bring out new drugs.
Also, multinational pharma companies may not want to introduce their
latest drugs into the Indian pharma market.
The Generics game
Generic drugs are the chemical and therapeutic equivalents of 'reference
brand drugs' typically sold under the chemical names at prices below their
branded drug equivalents.
Generic drugs from markets outside India, particularly the United States,
contribute significantly to the revenues of the top Indian pharma companies.
Generic drug manufacturers can wait for a drug to go off patent and then
start selling the generic version or make a Para IV filing under the Hatch
Waxman Act, in the United States, to challenge an existing patent holder.
Generic drug manufacturers are increasingly resorting to Para IV filings.
In case of Para IV filings, patents are validly circumvented. In order
to work their way around the patent the pharma companies carry out a significant
amount of research.
Litigation is an inevitable part of making a Para IV filing against an
existing patent holder (on the basis of loopholes the firm finds in the
patents which are listed out in 'Approved Drug Products with Therapeutic
Equivalence Evaluation,' popularly known as the Orange Book.
This may allow the company to launch a generic in the new drug dosage
form or a different drug delivery platform).
Litigations on a single Para IV filing can cost the company between $15-18
million. A successful Para IV filing gives the generic drug company Exclusive
Marketing right for 180 days. Otherwise the entire amount goes waste.
It's a high-risk high return strategy.
Para IV filings cannot be depended on always to bring in the revenue.
Indian companies have made successful Para IV filings in the past.
For instance, Ranbaxy Laboratories successfully challenged GlaxoSmithKline
over the patent for Ceftin. The company launched the generic version of
the drug, Cefuroxime Axetil, in the US market in March 2002. The generic
version generated annual revenues of around $115 million in the first
year of launch.
Similarly, Dr Reddy's Laboratories' Fluxotene, a 40 mg generic version
of Eli Lilly's blockbuster drug Prozac, made $70 million during the exclusivity
period.
Cheap manufacturing and market access are two factors, which mainly influence
the generics business. The manufacturing advantage can be easily lost
with the bigger generic players setting up their manufacturing operations
in India or other developing countries.
At the same time the Indian pharma companies may not be able to replicate
the market access of the bigger companies, which can make the placement
of their generic drugs in overseas markets increasingly difficult.
Also multinational pharmaceutical companies are resorting to new ways
to beat the Indian pharmaceutical companies at the generic game. They
have been resorting to "evergreening' -- making variations of the
same drug through the use of different salts and thus extending the period
of the patent beyond twenty years.
This delays the entry of the Indian pharmaceutical companies into market,
with their generics. What makes this issue more dangerous is the fact
that in some of the cases profits generated from the generics business
are being used to fund the drug discovery process, which has not started
making money as yet.
Off patent drugs
The new generic drug launches depend on blockbuster drugs going off patent.
The scenario here is somewhat bleak with most of the blockbuster drugs
going off patent only till 2008.
The pipeline of new drugs from the bigger pharma companies is drying
up. This means that after 2008 there won't be many drugs to be genericised.
With Indian pharmaceutical companies actively involved in the generics
game in the US and Europe, this factor can significantly impact their
balance sheets in the days to come.
In closing
There have been fears that the shift to product patent regime will lead
to an increase in the prices of drugs. The fears are largely uncalled
for as more than 90 per cent of the drugs in the Indian market are off
patent.
In the coming years the percentage of off patent drugs is expected to
be more than 70 per cent. However, at the consumer level, even this 10-30
per cent makes a huge difference to those who need these medicines.
These consumers might have to pay higher prices for the patented drugs
in the days to come. To add to this, the ordinance does not provide compulsory
licensing which is permissible under TRIPS. This may make matters worse
for the Indian consumer.
Commerce and Industry Minister Kamal Nath has said that the ordinance
has 'adequate steps for the introduction of a provision for enabling grant
of compulsory license' which is as vague as it can get.
Given the fact that quite a few drugs are going off patent in US till
2008 and that the ordinance (though vague in certain areas) is not going
to effect the Indian pharma companies very negatively, both Indian pharma
companies and their MNC counterparts are likely to continue their healthy
growth rates.
However, in the next few years Indian pharma companies have to transmogrify
into discovery-based companies in order to survive and continue the same
growth rates. Else they would either be swallowed by MNC giants or fade
away into oblivion.
Those still left might have to follow the path of becoming sole selling
agents.
Vivek Kaul is Research Scholar, Institute of Chartered Financial Analysts
of India; and Hasan Ahmed is senior executive, HRD, GCMMF Ltd. (Amul).
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