Posted: 13 Mar 2015 04:00 AM PDT By Kurt R. Karst – Nothing lasts forever in our mortal world, though some things try come close: Wonka’s Everlasting Gobstoppers, The NeverEnding Story, Doctor Who, the Energizer Bunny . . . . and perhaps one day in the not too distant future, the Everlasting Patent will be added to the list. What’s that you say? A patent term is only 20 years from the filing date of the earliest U.S. application to which priority is claimed (excluding provisional applications). While that’s generally true (minus any extensions, for example, a patent term extension under Title II of the Hatch-Waxman Amendments), there’s a provision buried in the nearly 400-page discussion draft of the 21st Century Cures Act that was released earlier this year (see our previous post here) that seems to create the possibility of essentially limitless term extensions for a patent (as a helpful reader pointed out to us). The provision at issue is in Section 1222 (titled “Capturing Lost Opportunities and Creating New Cures for Patients”) of Subtitle M (titled “Dormant Therapies”). It states: (C) EXTENSION OF PATENTS.—As we previously noted, Subtitle M is modeled after the Dormant Therapies Act of 2014 (S. 3004), which Senator Orrin Hatch (R-UT) introduced in December 2014. A press release from Senator Hatch last year noted that the Dormant Therapies Act “will remove the ‘ticking patent clock’ conundrum that forces companies to prioritize research based on which compounds can be brought quickly to market.” The Dormant Therapies Act is a redo of the Modernizing Our Drug & Diagnostics Evaluation and Regulatory Network Cures Act (“MODDERN Cures Act”), which was introduced in 2013 (H.R. 3116) and 2011 (H.R. 3497). Subtitle M would create a new guaranteed 15-year “protection period” for certain drug and biological products designated and approved as “dormant therapies” – that is, a “medicine [that] is being investigated or is intended to be investigated for an indication to address one or more unmet medical needs,” among other designation requirements. Specifically, during the 15-year “protection period,” FDA would be prohibited from approving an ANDA, 505(b)(2) application, or 505(b)(1) NDA for a drug product containing the same active moiety as in the dormant therapy, and would be prohibited from licensing a Section 351(k) biosimilar or a Section 351(a) BLA for a biological product containing an “active moiety that is highly similar” to that of the dormant therapy, unless, in the case of a 505(b)(1) NDA or Section 351(a) BLA, “the information provided to support approval of such application is comparable in scope and extent . . . to the information provided to support approval of the application for the qualifying medicine . . . .” That’s pretty significant protection; however, as part of the deal, companies must agree to waive certain patent rights. But they get other patent rights as noted in the provisions quoted above. The removal of the “ticking patent clock” for dormant therapies Sentaor Hatch referred to in a press release may be more than what some in industry were expecting, but exactly what it says, leading to a patent that could go on, and on, and on. Here’s how that would work under one reading of the proposed statutory text . . . . The choice and nature of the patent selected for extension is not limited to a patent on a new dormant therapy use of the drug or biologic. The proposed statutory text could allow for extension of any patent reasonably related to the drug or biologic that has not expired (or that is the subject of an interim patent term extension) selected from a list of all patents on the product by the applicant. That patent, once selected, would run until the expiration of the “protection period.” That’s just 15 years, right? But hold on . . . . What if a sponsor obtains multiple dormant therapy designations and approvals for the same drug or biologic or a related product to which the same patent is reasonably related? It certainly seems possible that the sponsor could select the same patent over and over again for extension. This would result in cascading protection periods for a single patent – as well as “for each patent issuing based upon an application for patent so identified” – that extend for decades, thus creating the everlasting patent. Of course, the “fix” to this issue is to prohibit the same patent from being selected more than once. But such a limitation is not in the proposed text. Perhaps that issue will be addressed in version 2.0 of the 21st Century Cures Act, which is rumored to be in the works. |
martes, 17 de marzo de 2015
FDA Law Blog: The Everlasting Patent: Is it Hiding in Plain Sight in the 21st Century Cures Act?
FDA Law Blog: The Everlasting Patent: Is it Hiding in Plain Sight in the 21st Century Cures Act?
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