Doctors Without Borders hail India’s rejection of drug patent
May 10th, 2010 - 4:12 pm ICT by IANSLondon, May 10 (IANS) Doctors Without Borders or ‘Medecins Sans Frontieres’ (MSF), an international humanitarian body, welcomed the decision by the Indian Patent Office to reject a product patent it had previously granted to Roche for valganciclovir.
Valganciclovir is primarily used as treatment and prevention of an infection caused by cytomegalovirus (CMV) in organ transplant patients, a highly lucrative market that Roche has sought to protect by patenting the medicine.
But CMV also affects people living with HIV, and if left untreated, can cause blindness and death.
“Roche was attempting to patent a new form of a drug that was really invented in the 1980s,” said Leena Menghaney, project manager of the MSF Campaign for Access to Essential Medicines in India.
“This decision shows that Section 3(d) of India’s Patents Act, which prevents companies from filing unjustified patents, is working. Equally importantly, the Patent Office also found separately that the patent claims were obvious and therefore not patentable,” says Menghaney.
Through this decision, the Indian Patent Office has also confirmed the right of patients groups to oppose a patent after it has been granted, a matter on which Roche claimed there was ambiguity.
This follows a similar recognition in 2002 in Thailand of patients as ‘persons interested’ in the outcome of a patent application.
“For people living with HIV/AIDS in developing countries, accessing valganciclovir at Roche prices was difficult,” said Loon Gangte of the Delhi Network of Positive People (DNP+), one of the patient groups that filed an opposition to the patent.
“The (May 5) decision will provide much needed relief as it secures the way for generic competition, which is the most effective and sustainable way of bringing drug prices down,” said Gangte.
To date, the price of valganciclovir is prohibitively expensive. Roche markets the drugs for up to $8,500 (Rs.382,000) for a four-month treatment course in high-income countries, says an MSF release.
In India, the Roche price for a standard protocol is approximately $5,950 (Rs.267,000). In December 2006, MSF approached Roche for a discount, but even the ‘discounted’ price was so high that some MSF AIDS projects opted out of providing this treatment for CMV.
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Tags: aids in developing countries, ambiguity, blindness, cmv, doctors without borders, drug patent, generic competition, hail, hiv aids, living with hiv, loon, lucrative market, organ transplant patients, patent application, patent claims, patent office, patient groups, roche, section 3, valganciclovir