Title: Dr' Khawar Mehdi
1INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS (IPRs) GLOBAL
RECOGNITION OF PATENT SYSTEM PAKISTANS
NATIONAL PHARMA INDUSTRYUNDER THREAT
Opportunities Threats for Pakistans
Pharmaceutical Sector under the WTO
Regime December 14, 2006
2Background to TRIPS
- Pakistan became signatory to the TRIPS agreement
in 1995. - TRIPS grants 10-year transition period to
developing countries during which patents are
filed in black box. - Transition period for Least Developed Countries
(LDCs) extends to 2016. - Pakistan is classified as developing country, not
LDC. - Prior to 1995, inventors filed patents in each
country individually. - Prior to 1995, Pakistan granted process patents,
not product patents.
3IPRs are sacred
- We, the national generic pharmaceutical industry
respect IPRs - However, Pakistans MNCs are pushing TRIPS and in
the process seriously violating IPR regimes as
laid down by TRIPS
4Looming Threat
- The unfair inaccurate interpretation and
implementation of the spirit of TRIPS in Pakistan - A disaster for
- a) People
- b) Local Pharma
- c) Government
- d) All of the above
5A Pharmaceutical Patent is Different from Other
Types of Patents in many Respects
- A New Pharmaceutical product Patent is supposed
to - Improve quality of life
- Cure disease
- Save life
- Prevent illness from spreading
- WHERE HUMAN HEALTH IS THE PRIMARY BENEFICIARY
6In Pakistan our IPR law does not take TRIPS
articles 70(3) and 70(8) into account
- Article 70(3) Molecules that are available in
the public domain before 1995 are not required to
be covered under the product patent regime - Article 70(8) All products (brands) that have
been launched prior to patent implementation (Jan
1, 2005) may continue to be marketed after
implementation of patent regime. - Resultant litigation for products not covered
under TRIPS
7Process Patent
- If the result of a new process is a new article
or a better article or a cheaper article than
that produced by an old method, that process is
patentable and is called the process patent. - Patents filed prior to 1995 in Pakistan are
process patents
8Product Patent
- A product patent means the grant of a monopoly
right to produce that productpreventing any
other person from producing the same producteven
by adopting a different or new process. - Patents filed in Black box (post-1995) are
product patents
9Black Box Patent Rules in Pakistan
- All international patents filed post-1995 are
called black box patents. - Black box patents are applicable to all countries
that have signed TRIPS. - In Pakistan, the black box was opened on January
1, 2005. - The products in black box will be processed and
granted patent protection. - Black box patents are product patents
10Ever Green Patents
- There is a serious concern within the ranks of
the national pharmaceutical industry - It is seriously felt that improper, ineffective,
non-comprehensive and ill-examination of Black
Box Applications will only result large number of
product patents thereby promoting the very
concept of EVER GREEN PATENTS as large number of
Patent Applications are believed to be mere
repetition of old and expired patents as has been
done in the case of Patent application for
ROSIGLITAZONE and that of MONTELUKAST.
11Basic Facts About Off Patent Medicines
- Are clinically equivalent versions of RD
medicines - Are affordable
- Are quality medicines
- Carry a tradition of excellence
- Benefiting society
- Brining economic sense to pharmaceutical care
- Contributing to growth and employment
- Committed to the future
- Entire National Pharmaceutical Industry is based
on Off Patent Medicines
12Pharmaceutical patents are distinct as they
affect human life
- Pharmaceutical and Biotechnology products
claiming to improving the quality of Human Health
and Curing Disease can not be treated at par with
other products that humans use, consume and
depend on a daily basis - Essentially and similarly a Drug Patent cannot be
treated at par with other patents with reference
to IPRs
13Drugs are Distinct cannot be compared with
other forms of Intellectual Property- a unique
class of its own
- Aspirin
- Penicillin
- Tamoxifen
- Rifampicin
- Ferrari V 12 Engine
- Motorola Razor
- Boeing 767
- iPOD
VS
14In USA where some of the richest RD based
Pharmaceuticals are based Off Patent Drugs are
thriving
- During 2003 -2005, off patent drugs growth
reached 24 - compared with growth of Brands' of
just 8 - Off patent drugs are typically a third to half
the price of new brand-name drugs and are
underutilized. - Off patent drugs make up about 45 of all
prescriptions. - Each 1 increase in generic use that replaces
brands saves from 2.1 billion to 2.8 billion a
year.
15US 55-65bn worth of drugs would go off patent
by 2007
- 2001 Prozac, Buspar,
- 2002 Glucophage, Prinivil, Augmentin
- 2003 Prilosec, Topamax, Claritin, Ciprofloxacin,
- 2004 Neurontin, Wellbutrin, Allegra,
- 2005 Plavix, Biaxin, Pravachol, Zithromax,
Zyprexa - 2006 Zocor, Premarin, Zofran, Norvasc
- 2007 Zoloft, Lipitor, Zyrtec, Fosamax
16A Popular National Culture is sensitive to the
needs of the populace and nation both
- Reflective of indigenous ground reality
- Have elements of growth and grooming
- Evolutionary
- Promoting merit
- Engaging the national mainstream
- Liberating us of any exploiting influences and
discourage Neo-colonial masters - Enabling national agenda
17Let us make sure that IPR laws will not end up
becoming a tool of EXPLOITATION by vested
interests
- It is extremely important that a fair and leveled
understanding is created by the state to the
advantage of all stakeholders, till the system
achieves equilibrium and is competent and
reflective of the indigenous ground reality
18A Tacit Acknowledgement
- ---how national IPR rights could best be designed
to benefit developing countries. Inherent in
that remit was the acknowledgement that IPRs
could be a tool which could help or hinder more
fragile economies. Clare Short, the Secretary
of State for International Development in UK, who
established the Commission on Intellectual
Property Rights in May 2001
19The fact of the matter is
- Insofar as their benefits outweigh their
disadvantages, the developed world has the wealth
and infrastructure to take advantage of the
opportunities provided. It is likely that
neither of these holds true for developing and
least developed countries. - Poor and developing countries may find them
useful provided they are accommodated to suit
local palates. - Sir Hugh Laddie UK High Court Patents Judge
20IPRs are here to stay
- We respect IPRs, but it seems to us that they are
neither the problem nor the solution they are
often portrayed to be. They are themselves only
tools - How these tools are used is what matters
- To use in humanitarian efforts to give developing
countries better access to the new life saving
technologies and scientific pharmaceutical
developments - Or to deprive them of these very life saving
technologies and steal them of their basic right
to health - The key is to match the proper IPRs with
- specific socioeconomic,
- technical,
- commercial,
- and administrative conditions with specific
developing countries, and manage them well
21Current Situation
- IPR LAWS IN PAKISTAN ARE TRIPS
- New ordinance is totally in favor of MNCs is
being exploited by MNCs by filing DUAL
APPLICATIONS 1 under regular system and 1 under
Black Box - The Black Box examinations are not being
conducted according to the law
22Current Situation
- The newly created IPO organization is a step
in the right direction. Equally important is the
fact that major reforms and structural changes
need to be taken at lower levels of the
organization and its reporting bureaucracy
23Concerns Of National Pharma Industry
- The National Pharmaceutical Industry humbly
pleads, before it gets too late, that every
effort should be made to evade such
eventualities. In this regard few suggestion or
recommendation are submitted for a fair
interpretation/clarification of procedure of
examination under the Patent Ordinance 2000,
24Concerns Of National Pharma Industry
- We, therefore, cannot rule out the vital concern
expressed by many that after the acceptance of
BLACK BOX APPLICATION and/or product patent
rights, drugs which are being produced by
national companies, would go off the market, as
provided under Section 22 of the Patent Ordinance
2000. This would lead to a quantum leap in drug
prices as MNCs will use their patent monopoly to
hike up the prices for these drugs.
25Recommendations
- Review of IPR laws with specific relevance to the
development of Off Patent Pharma Industry - Support the development of Governmental policies
which seek to ensure access to medicinal care for
all consumers - Promote balanced and off patent/generic-friendly
intellectual property rights in the
pharmaceutical sector which ensure that timely
access to Pakistani market is guaranteed for off
patent/generic pharmaceutical products
26Recommendations
- Encourage the scientific development,
professional awareness and general knowledge of
generic medicines - Promote the harmonization of departmental
regulations relating to generic products - Provide guidance to national organizations and
Pakistan government in improving the regulatory
and legal expertise relating to the registration
and marketing of generic medicines
27Recommendations
- Review, fair interpretation accurate
implementation of IPR laws in order to promote
balanced and generic friendly IPR environment for
the pharmaceutical industry in Pakistan - IPO office is a positive development and its
priority should be to save the national
pharmaceutical industry from being take advantage
of by the MNCs, without negating the spirit of
TRIPS
28Thank you