Press note

Campaign for Affordable Trastuzumab

The Campaign for Affordable Trastuzumab welcomes the decision of the Patent Controller, Kolkata,1 to dismiss three applications for divisional patents on Trastuzumab (Herceptin), the life-saving breast cancer drug controlled by Swiss pharma major Roche.

Hailed as a miracle drug, Trastuzumab has a dramatic impact on the HER2+ variant of breast cancer, significantly reducing the risk of recurrence and expanding the possibility of a disease-free life. However, the drug is priced exorbitantly and, at Rs.9 lakhs for a minimum course of 12 injections, is out of reach for the majority of Indian women. According to official statistics, more than 25,000 Indian women (increasingly in the under-45 age group) are diagnosed with HER2+ breast cancer every year, of whom less than 5 percent are able to access Trastuzumab2.

The Campaign for Affordable Trastuzumab, launched in November 2012 and endorsed by over 200 Indian and global patient associations, cancer survivors, health movements, women’s rights activists and eminent jurists – has been demanding that the Government of India intervene to enable the production of biosimilars and ensure that the drug is made available to all those who can benefit from it.

In the case of Trastuzumab, the basic compound is not patentable in India since it was developed before India revised its patent regime to make it WTO-compatible. However, in 2007, an Indian patent3 was granted to Genentech (the original developer, later acquired by Roche) for a combination of the basic compound with the HER2+ antibody. This patent expires in 2019.

In April this year, we alerted the Controller General of Patents to Roche’s attempt to protect its monopoly beyond the term of its patent by filing “divisional” patent applications built around matter extracted from the original “parent application”. In our letter to the Controller-General4, we pointed out that these divisional applications are clearly designed to keep interested competitors away from developing more affordable biosimilars by creating uncertainty on the exact status of the patent protection for the drug.

India’s patent regime has been globally lauded for its ability to resist pressures from big pharma and for its stringent provisions against “evergreening” or extending the legal term of a patent by seeking fresh protection for non-significant changes in the original innovation. Moreover, Indian law does not allow the filing of divisional applications once the “parent” patent has been granted, and also clearly spells out the timeline for submitting divisional applications and for responding to queries. As we pointed out in our letter to the Controller-General, these provisions were ignored by Roche in a cynical attempt to subvert the legal regime and bring in “evergreening” through the back door.  

Our characterisation of the divisional applications filed by Roche as frivolous and mala fide is borne out by the statement of the Kolkata Patent Controller, that Roche lawyers did not bother to appear for hearings and did not make written submissions despite being given repeated opportunities to make their case. The Kolkata Patent Office was therefore entirely within its rights in dismissing these applications, pending with them since 2006 and 2009.

Despite its unverified claims of having provided the drug at a reduced price to a small and select group of patients, Roche’s reaction to the decision of the Kolkata Patent Office5 reveals its determination to continue its predatory pricing policy even if it means subverting Indian law to reap a profit that is completely disproportionate to the cost of development and production of Trastuzumab.

The oft-repeated claim by the pharma industry, that the high prices of drugs such as Trastuzumab are justified in relation to the costs of research and development, has now been comprehensively debunked by none other than the CEO of pharma giant Glaxo Smith Kline.6 Calling it one of “the great myths of the industry”, he revealed out that the cost calculation includes the cost of failed drugs. According to him, the rate of return on R&D investment has gone up by as much as 30% in recent years because fewer drugs have flopped in late-stage testing.

Herceptin was approved by the FDA in 1998. The Genentech balance sheet shows that Herceptin brought in US$ 1287 million for Genentech in 20077, the year that it was taken over by Roche. Since then, Herceptin has been swelling the Roche coffers – along with two other cancer drugs Avastin and Rituxan, Herceptin has accounted for 32% of Roche’s total revenue for at least five years. The money Roche has earned from Herceptin is therefore likely to be several times more than the upper figure of $800 million quoted for the cost of development. We should also take into account the hidden public funding that goes into drug development by corporates – for instance, clinical trials and supplementary research are usually carried out in hospitals and laboratories that are supported by public grants.

Recent decisions by India’s Intellectual Property Appellate Board upholding the compulsory licence for Nexavar and revoking the patent for Hepatitis-C drug Pegasys have dealt a major blow to big pharma’s plans of hunting freely in the Indian drug market. These decisions have been applauded and welcomed by health rights groups and public interest groups around the world as an assurance of India’s political will to resist arm-twisting by pharma MNCs.

Global experience confirms that open competition via generics is a far more effective mechanism for price reduction than other options such as the negotiated price reductions being offered by the pharma industry. In May 2013, an Expert Committee set up by the Ministry of Health recommended compulsory licensing for Trastuzumab. This recommendation is still awaiting a decision from the Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion (DIPP), Ministry of Commerce.

We are concerned at reports8 suggesting that DIPP’s decision will depend on generic manufacturers already having applied for marketing permission for a biosimilar version of Trastuzumab. This approach is one of putting the cart before the horse – it is unlikely that generic manufacturers will reveal their hand by applying for marketing permission without being assured of the a clear field where patent barriers will not block their entry into the market. On the other hand, we have reason to believe that the announcement of compulsory licensing by DIPP will open the door for marketing applications from generic manufacturers who already have Trastuzumab biosimilars in the pipeline.

The Campaign for Affordable Trastuzumab urges the Government of India to act without delay to allow generic manufacturers to produce biosmilars of Trastuzumab. The lives of thousands of Indian women are at stake – allowing a single predatory company to control the drug that can save them is ethically, legally and economically unjustified.

KALYANI MENON-SEN

Coordinator, Campaign for Affordable Trastuzumab

For further information, please contact:

Kalyani Menon-Sen +91-9910306382

Leena Menghaney +91-9811365412

2 According to doctors at the Tata Memorial Cancer Centre, Mumbai.

3 Indian Patent 205534

4 Attached for your reference.

 

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