Patents
in India are granted to encourage inventions and to secure that it is worked on
a commercial scale. The Indian Patent Act ensures that a Patentee should not be
able to enjoy a monopoly for the importation of the patented article. The
Patent Act provides measures by way of compulsory licensing (CL) to ensure that
the patents do not impede the protection of public health and nutrition and the
patent rights are not abused by the patentee. The CL therefore serves to strike
balance between two disparate objectives- rewarding patentees for their
invention and making the patented products, particularly pharmaceutical
products, available to large population in developing and under developed
countries at cheaper and affordable cost.
As is
known, CLs allow third parties to exploit a patented invention without the
consent of the patentee. They there, deprive patentees of their most important
right, i.e. the right to say ‘no’ to the exploitation of their invention by the
third parties. CLs are usually granted through administrative procedures
managed by a governmental body. CLs are granted by governments which, thereby,
substitute their authority for the consent of the patent owner. They therefore
are in the nature of administrative contracts.
On March
9, 2012, India’s first CL was granted by the Patent Office to Natco Pahrma Ltd.
for producing generic version of Bayer Corporation’s patented medicine Nexavar,
used in the treatment of Liver and Kidney cancer. The Controller decided Bayer on all the three
grounds in the Patents Act for the grant of CL (reasonably requirements of the
public not being satisfied; non-availability to the public at a reasonably
affordable price, and the patented invention not being worked in the territory
of India). While the multinational giant was selling the drug at INR 2.80 lakh
for a month’s course, Natco promised to make available the same at a price
about 3% (INR 8800) of what was charged by Bayer. Natco was directed to pay 6%
of the net sales of the drug as royalty to Bayer. Among other important terms
and condition of the non-assignable, non-exclusive license were directions to
Natco to manufacture the patented drug only at their own manufacturing
facility, selling the drug only within the Indian Territory and supplying the
patented drug to at least 600 needy and deserving patients per year free of
cost.
Aggrieved
by the Controller’s decision, Bayer immediately moved to the Intellectual
Property Appellate Board (IPAB) alleging that the grant of CL was illegal and
unsustainable. On March 4, 2013, IPAB upheld the country’s first compulsory
license to a pharmaceutical product. Specifically, the decision upheld a
compulsory license issued to Natco Pharma Ltd., an Indian generic drug
manufacturer, to sell Bayer’s patented chemotherapy drug Nexavar (sorafenib
tosylate). The Board rejected Bayer’s appeal holding that if stay was
granted, it would definitely jeopardize the interest of the public who need the
drug at the later stage of the disease. It further held that the right of
access to affordable medicine was as much a matter of right to dignity of the
patients and to grant stay at this juncture would really affect them. Given the
economic consequences of this compulsory license, Bayer is expected to further
appeal this decision. It is important for companies procuring patents and
doing business in India in all industries to understand the country’s
compulsory licensing laws.
A
compulsory license is a statutorily created license that allows certain parties
to use or manufacture a product encompassed by the claims of a patent without
the permission of the patent owner (patentee) in exchange for a specified
royalty. The Indian Patent Act (Act) contains very broad compulsory
licensing provisions. The two provisions of the Act that allow for
compulsory licenses are Sections 84 and 92.
Compulsory Licenses in India
As mentioned above, the IPAB upheld the compulsory license to
Nexavar on March 4, 2013, which was originally granted by the Controller in
March 2012. Since 2012, compulsory licenses have been granted or are in
process of being granted for several pharmaceutical products as shown by below:
Drug
|
Company
|
Indication
|
When
Issued
|
Nexavar®
|
Bayer
|
Hepatocellular
carcinoma
|
March 2012 –
Decision upheld March 2013 (Article 84)
|
Herceptin®
|
Genentech
|
Breast cancer
|
In process by the
Department of Industry Property and Promotion (DIPP) (Article 92)
|
Ixempra®
|
BMS
|
Breast cancer
|
In process by the
DIPP (Article 92)
|
Sprycel®
|
BMS
|
Leukemia
|
In process by the
DIPP (Article 92)
|
Compulsory licenses issued in other countries
India is not the only country that has issued compulsory
licenses for patented pharmaceutical products. While the compulsory
license laws vary country-by-country, as shown in the below table, compulsory licenses
have been issued by several countries for a number of different pharmaceutical
products, as under-
Country
|
Drugs
|
Brazil
|
Efavirenz
|
Cameroon
|
Lamivudine,
Nevirapine
|
Canada
|
Oseltamivir
|
Ecuador
|
Lopinavir/Ritonavir
|
Ghana
|
Generic HIV
and AIDS medicines
|
Indonesia
|
Lamivudine,
Nevirapine
|
Israel
|
Hepatitis B
vaccine
|
Italy
|
Imipenem/cilastatine,
Sumatripan succinate
|
Malaysia
|
Didlanosine,
Zidovudine
|
Mozambique
|
Lamivudine,
Stavudine, Nevirapine
|
Thailand
|
Lopinavir/Ritonavir,
Clopidrogel, Erlotinib, Letrozole, Docetaxel
|
Zambia
|
Lamivudine,
Stavudine, Nevirapine
|
Conclusion
The issue of compulsory licenses in India is something that
every company should be concerned about when procuring patents and conducting
business in India. While most of the recent attention has centered on
compulsory licenses for patented pharmaceutical products, it is important to
remember that India’s Patent Act provides for broad compulsory license
provisions that are not limited to just pharmaceutical products but encompass
products from any technology.