ACCESS
TO SOFOSBUVIR, LEDIPASVIR AND VELPATASVIR
ANALYSIS
& KEY RECOMMENDATIONS ON GILEAD’S VOLUNTARY LICENSE
March
2015
BACKGROUND
The
international medical humanitarian organisation Médecins Sans
Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF) is currently seeking to
scale up access to treatment for hepatitis C virus (HCV) in at least
nine countries. To do so, MSF requires access to low-cost, quality
generic versions of direct acting antivirals (DAAs), free of barriers
that could interfere with procurement and patient care. A number of
generic producers in India, Egypt, Bangladesh and China are investing
in producing the active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) or
formulations of DAAs.
In
November 2013 and February 2014, public interest groups and generics
companies filed the first patent oppositions against Gilead Sciences
(Gilead)’s patent applications in India. Within months, Gilead
signed voluntary license agreements with eleven Indian generics
pharmaceutical companies
1 and
API manufacturers for the HCV DAAs sofosbuvir, ledipasvir and
velpatasvir.
2 A
number of key companies that were developing generic versions and
challenging relevant patent applications decided to sign the license.
Other companies that have not yet invested in HCV DAAs also signed.
MSF
is concerned that existing obligations and restrictions under
Gilead’s license will undermine access and exclude millions of
patients with HCV in low- and middle-income countries.
This
analysis highlights MSF’s key concerns and recommends modifications
to the license that Gilead and the Indian generic companies that have
signed the license (licensees) should take into consideration.
KEY
CONCERNS
- The geographic scope of the license excludes millions of people with HCV in middle-income countries
Although
the license includes 91 low-income and lower-middle-income countries
in its geographic coverage, it excludes 50 middle-income countries
(see Table 1). Out of the excluded middle-income countries, 13 are
lower middle income (including Ukraine) and 37 are upper middle
income (including Iran). MSF is preparing to start HCV treatment in
both Iran and Ukraine. There are approximately 49 million people
living with HCV in excluded
- Aurobindo Pharma Ltd., Biocon Limited, Natco Pharma Ltd., Cadila Healthcare Ltd., Ranbaxy Laboratories Ltd., Sequent Scientific Ltd., Strides Arcolab Ltd., Cipla Ltd., Hetero Labs Ltd., Laurus Labs Pvt. Ltd, Mylan Laboratories Ltd.
- Gilead expanded the license to include veltapasvir in late January 2015. See: http://www.gilead.com/news/press- releases/2015/1/gilead-expands-hepatitis-c-generic-licensing-agreements-to-include-investigational-pangenotypic-agent.
middle-income
countries, including nearly 2.6 million in Brazil, 1.5 million in
Thailand and 30 million in China. Together, people living with HCV in
excluded middle-income countries represent 43% of the total
population of people living with HCV in all middle-income countries.
3
Gilead
has introduced a range of restrictions that segment these markets and
inhibit licensees from supplying the excluded countries with low-cost
versions of DAAs, as discussed below.
Table
1: Middle-Income Countries Excluded from Gilead’s Voluntary License
Gilead’s
license excludes the following middle-income countries:
Albania
|
Dominican
Republic
|
Libya
|
Romania
|
Algeria
|
Ecuador
|
Macedonia
|
Serbia
|
Argentina
|
El
Salvador
|
Malaysia
|
St.
Lucia
|
Armenia
|
Georgia
|
Marshall
Islands
|
Syria
|
Azerbaijan
|
Grenada
|
Mexico
|
Thailand
|
Belarus
|
Hungary
|
Micronesia
|
Tunisia
|
Belize
|
Iran
|
Moldova
|
Turkey
|
Bosnia
Herzegovina
|
Iraq
|
Montenegro
|
Ukraine
|
Brazil
|
Jamaica
|
Morocco
|
Venezuela
|
Bulgaria
|
Jordan
|
Panama
|
West
Bank & Gaza
|
China
|
Kazakhstan
|
Paraguay
|
Yemen
|
Columbia
|
Kosovo
|
Peru
|
|
Costa
Rica
|
Lebanon
|
Philippines
|
- The patent landscape for Gilead’s DAAs lacks transparency and is indicative of an evergreening strategy
Gilead
has published the license for sofosbuvir and ledipasvir that the
company signed with seven Indian generics manufacturers in 2014;
however the company has not published a new or amended license since
expanding the license to include velpatasvir and four additional
companies. Furthermore, Gilead does not provide sufficient
transparency with respect to patent applications in countries
included or excluded from the license. Specifically, Gilead has
released incomplete information concerning patents for sofosbuvir and
ledipasvir, and no patent information related to velpatasvir since
its announcement of expanding the license in January 2015.
The
World Health Organization (WHO) issued and is currently updating a
study
4 that
highlights the pending applications and granted patents for both
sofosbuvir and ledipasvir, as well as other DAAs.
5 Additionally,
UNITAID is completing a study that will include a patent landscape
for velpatasvir. However, even these studies may not be able to
identify all claims for secondary (derivatives, composition,
fixed-dose combinations, process) patents. Though these patents are
usually weak in nature, if granted by patent offices in developing
countries, they could further block generic competition, extend
patent terms and undermine access.
It
is not clear how many countries included in the license will have
patents in force that would have otherwise blocked access to Gilead’s
DAAs in the absence of a license agreement; there
- Baker B. Gilead’s hepatitis C medicines license- troubling territorial exclusions, illusory exceptions, and tiered pricing policy fracture global access. Health GAP (2014). See: http://www.healthgap.org/hep_c.
- For sofosbuvir, the two primary patents are WO/2005/003147A2 for the base compound and WO/2008/121634A2 for the structural formula and prodrug. For ledipasvir, the two primary patents are WO/2010/132601A1 for base compound and WO/2013/184698A1
for
the product and crystalline forms. See:
http://www.who.int/phi/implementation/ip_trade/ip_patent_landscapes/en/.
5
Ibid.
2
are
patent oppositions and significant litigation for the key primary
patents for sofosbuvir in multiple countries. Recently, the Indian
Patent Controller rejected Gilead’s patent application for the
sofosbuvir base compound.
6 Numerous
oppositions on sofosbuvir patents have also been filed before the
European Patent Office by patient organisations and generics
companies.
7 Depending
on the outcome of these oppositions, other litigation and examination
of the pending patent applications, generic companies that do not
sign a license with Gilead might have more opportunities over the
years to sell to more middle-income countries, thus reaching more
patients.
One
significant outcome is that licensees will not invest in challenging
patent applications at the examination stage, even on secondary
patent applications that might be easier to oppose in middle-income
countries, including India. Indirectly, the license operates as a
patent settlement between Gilead and Indian generics companies. In
particular, the patent challenges filed by the generic company Natco
Pharma (licensee) should be closely watched as the company is now
unlikely to pursue these oppositions seriously.
3.
Licensees may not terminate or unbundle the
license for five years
Generics
firms are bound to the license for five years, regardless of changes
in circumstances of patents in India and other export markets. By
contrast, Gilead’s license to the Medicines Patent Pool for the
antiretroviral medicine tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) allowed
for companies to immediately terminate a voluntary license, including
and especially if a pre-grant opposition was successful.
In
January 2015, the Patent Controller in India denied Gilead’s patent
application for the base compound of sofosbuvir, one substantial
barrier to generic competition. This decision will largely enhance
the opportunity for generic production of sofosbuvir in India.
However companies that have signed the license cannot opt out, in
order to benefit from the decision, due to the restrictive
termination clause.
After
five years, a licensee can unbundle the license so that it could
maintain a voluntary license for one or more DAA(s) while severing
the license with Gilead for the other DAA(s). This could allow
licensees to sell the DAAs for lower prices or to more patients in
more countries, depending on the patent landscape for each drug, and
depending on the use of pre-grant oppositions or other TRIPS
flexibilities by excluded countries. It is unfortunate that
unbundling is not immediately available.
4.
The definitions of patents under the license
are excessively broad
According
to the license, the definition of patents includes granted patents,
applications and other secondary patents (including granted patents
and applications) that are related to the production of the three
DAAs and their APIs. The license also includes patents on method of
use or method of manufacture under “product patent,” which
is unusual and excessive for a legal definition of a product patent.
Furthermore, the situation of “no patent” in eligible
countries under the license can only be established if there is no
“reasonable possibility of obtaining such a Product
Patent within a reasonable period of time,” which includes
pending applications, the filing of additional (including
future) patent applications or legal actions, including appeals.
6
Ibid.
3
- It perpetuates the strategy of ‘evergreening’ patents, particularly secondary patents with a strong likelihood of failing the inventiveness test in many jurisdictions.
- It imposes upon Indian generics manufacturers legal requirements that exceed India’s patent law, according to which enforcement and compulsory licensing is only legally possible after an application is granted.
- It introduces a self-evolving scope of definition that would include both existing and future patents, including those that have not been filed yet.
In
this regard, any future possibility of a secondary patent filing
could be interpreted as falling within this scope. The broad
definitions of patents carry a number of consequences for ensuring
access to generic versions of relevant medicines for the excluded
countries as the analysis below illustrates.
- The license could prevent licensees from selling APIs and finished products to excluded countries
The
broad definitions of patents, when applied to the license, create
barriers that prevent licensees from selling DAAs to excluded
countries. A summary table (Table 2) of the conditions under which
licensees may sell DAAs to the excluded countries illustrates that
the license either explicitly prevents or creates unnecessary
ambiguities with respect to sales of DAAs to the excluded countries:
Table
2: Challenges for the excluded countries to import generic DAAs from
Gilead’s Licensees
4
Under
Article 10.3 (c) of the license, Gilead prevents licensees from
supplying DAAs to the excluded countries except under extremely
restrictive circumstances when there is no product patent (as broadly
defined by the license) and no reasonable possibility for Gilead to
pursue a patent. Therefore, even if patents are successfully opposed
or invalidated, or are unlikely to meet patentability standards, it
would be difficult for licensees to determine that there is no
“reasonable possibility” for Gilead to obtain a patent in
an excluded country.
In
addition, since Gilead has the option to keep filing secondary patent
applications, it is not likely that there will be a scenario in which
there is no “reasonable
possibility”
for Gilead to obtain a patent in an excluded country.
9 With
this broad definition of a patent, Gilead can prevent sales in
excluded countries merely by evergreening, which includes filing new
patent applications on derivatives and combinations, divisional
applications or amendments to existing claims, and appeals to
rejected patents that can take substantial time even for an efficient
court system to address.
Under
Article 10.3 (d) of the license, Gilead may offer limited means for
the excluded countries to seek access to low-cost generic versions of
these medicines. However, ambiguity in the text may prevent full use
of the provision. Other potential routes to enable low-cost access
are not necessarily possible, even if there are no granted product
patents in India or in the excluded countries. In particular:
- Excluded countries that have issued a product patent may be able to unilaterally import generic versions of licensed DAAs from licensees by issuing a compulsory license. However, 10.3 (d) – due to its construction, may also require issuance of a compulsory license in India – in particular due to the ambiguous wording of clause (ii) (Y)(1),(2) and (Z) of Article 10.3 (d). If a compulsory license is required in India, it would preclude use of the provision for the foreseeable future since currently there are no granted product patents in India and compulsory licenses cannot be issued on pending or rejected patent applications.
- If a product patent is granted in India, and India issues a compulsory license, licensees can export to the excluded countries that have no patents or that have issued a compulsory license. However, as mentioned directly above, product patents may not be granted or denied in India for a considerable period of time and a compulsory license can only be issued in India if the product patent is granted. Most, if not all importing countries will be unable to issue a compulsory license on a pending patent (or upon a rejected patent that is under appeal), and final decisions on the patent status (whether to grant or deny) may also take considerable time.
- If there are no applications, patents or pending appeals in either India or the importing country, then a licensee may export DAAs outside of the license. However, due to the broad definition of a patent, such a scenario is not possible in India or an importing
9A
case in point is the case of PAHO’s tender for procurement of the
HIV medicine atazanavir for Venezuela, which was won by the Indian
subsidiary of the US generic company Mylan in 2012 and 2014. Using a
licensing agreement with Mylan that defines patents as covering
pending applications and pending appeals of rejected applications,
BMS sued Mylan in Indian and US courts to prevent export to Venezuela
(which was not included in the list of licensed territories), despite
the fact that there were and are no granted product patents on the
compound, pro-drug or salt form in India or Venezuela. BMS has
pending patent applications in both jurisdictions and, in addition,
process patents granted in India for which generic companies have
developed non-infringing processes. After considerable delay due to
BMS’s efforts to secure an injunction in Indian courts, Mylan was
finally able to export the consignment of medicine (100,000 bottles)
in the last quarter of 2014 after securing a hard-won decision from
the District Court of Hyderabad, followed by the Appeals Court (High
Court of Telegana & Andhra Pradesh), which rejected the
injunction application and instructed Mylan to deposit 5% of the
invoice price with the court registrar pending completion of the
suit. Such litigation has a chilling effect on generic companies that
wish to supply in territories not included in the license.
5
country
for many years, especially as it is expected that Gilead is likely to
pursue litigation extensively and file evergreening patent claims or
divisional applications.
6.
Only Indian generics companies are offered
licenses for finished products and APIs
Gilead
opened negotiations for licenses with only Indian generics producers
for both the finished products and the APIs. Gilead has not initiated
negotiations for licenses with any generics company based outside of
India, such as manufacturers in China and Brazil. Although the Indian
industry’s role as the ‘pharmacy of the developing world’ is
well-documented, this role is threatened by the fact that more Indian
generics companies are either entering into long-term business
partnerships for lucrative high-income markets with multinational
pharmaceutical companies or are being wholly acquired by them. These
generics companies are increasingly unwilling to ‘launch at risk’
10 generic
versions of treatments or challenge patent applications filed by
originator companies in developing countries as a result of these
business relationships. At the same time, the Government of India
remains under constant pressure to adopt more restrictive levels of
intellectual property protection that will undermine the use of TRIPS
flexibilities for generic competition.
11
Restricting
the licensee scope to India is problematic in terms of limiting the
potential of generic competition emerging from producers in other
developing countries, establishing global economies of scale for
generic competition on the finished products, and in securing
sufficient sourcing options for APIs and finished formulations in
different regions to eventually secure sustainable supplies and
affordable prices for HCV treatment in developing countries.
- The license segments the API market and increases the cost of production and final DAA prices
Gilead
has segmented the market for finished products, undermining low-cost
generic competition across all developing countries. Similarly,
Gilead has segmented the market for APIs worldwide, both through the
license and through its own sourcing. APIs constitute a significant
percentage of the total cost of production, and the flexibility and
ability to source a wide range of low-cost APIs and intermediates
plays an important role in ensuring affordable prices for finished
products.
Gilead
is segmenting the API market through the following strategies:
- Licensees can only source APIs and intermediates from other Indian licensees, or from Gilead’s suppliers, upon Gilead’s prior approval. Such restrictions, if they create shortages or limit access to producers developing and selling APIs at lower costs, would increase the cost of production and therefore the overall cost of the finished product.
- Gilead has listed intermediate patents under the license and such patents have already been granted in India and China. Companies that are not licensees must develop non-infringing processes and/or challenge the patents to remove this barrier.
- A pharmaceutical company may seek to place a generic version of a patented drug on the market even when it anticipates an infringement suit. This is because the company many have a non-infringement defence and/or strong invalidity argument for the patent/s in question that can be used for a counterclaim for revocation.
- MSF has documented a timeline of U.S. pressure on India regarding India’s intellectual property policies. See:
6
- Finally, Gilead is not working with or allowing the licensees to access a range of API producers in China that would be able to produce key intermediates and APIs at substantially lower prices and could improve the ability of Gilead, licensees and other manufacturers to offer DAAs at lower prices worldwide.
- Licensees are required to implement an anti-diversion programme which will egregiously restrict access to medicines and undermine patient confidentiality
Gilead’s
license mandates licensees to introduce a specific anti-diversion
plan on a country-by-country basis, including a mechanism of “sold
directly to patients.”
This plan emulates Gilead’s own anti -diversion programme in
developing countries which have threatened to undermine access and
patient confidentiality, exclude significant numbers of vulnerable
patients, and place an undue burden on health systems and treatment
providers for no legitimate medical reasons, but rather for purely
commercial reasons. MSF has also provided a detailed analysis on
these measures.
12
The
far-reaching consequences of the programme, especially since Gilead
requires licensees to imitate this in their marketing and
distribution plans, would set a negative precedent that substantially
undermines HCV treatment scale-up in high-burden countries and
confidentiality of patients’ data, and is likely to exclude the
most marginalised communities, including refugees, injecting drug
users and patients with unstable living arrangements who will have
difficulty meeting the burdensome requirements of the programme.
- Additional barriers will undermine registration and marketing of optimal, low-cost DAA combinations
Alongside
the anti-diversion program, there are additional, non-patent barriers
that will limit the effectiveness of the license to enable access to
low-cost generic medicines:
- Timely registration: The license does not contain any enforceable obligation for Gilead or its licensees to pursue registration of the products in developing countries apart from a loose requirement for licensees to obtain regulatory approvals in the countries in the territory and Gilead’s discretion of filing for registration for APIs and finished product “in the Territory.” If Gilead chooses not to apply for registration in one country where the originator’s registration is a prerequisite for initiating generic registration, options for those countries to utilize local generic supply or import of generic versions would not be possible. Gilead and its licensees must register the licensed DAAs with the national drug regulatory systems of included countries to ensure access for patients in all 91 countries covered by the license. Registration of the generic products in countries outside of the geographic scope of the license similarly depends on the commercial willingness of Gilead and its business partners. However, for countries that are excluded from the license, generic licensees are unlikely to pursue registration, hindering the use of compulsory licensing as well.
12
A detailed analysis from MSF is available online. See:
http://www.msfaccess.org/sites/default/files/HepC_Gilead_anti-
diversion_FINAL.pdf
7
- Data exclusivity: Data exclusivity barriers could restrict access to generic versions of DAAs produced by licensees. The license provides for a waiver of Gilead’s regulatory data exclusivity only when a licensee seeks regulatory approval in countries included in the license. No specific clause under the license ensures excluded countries can benefit from a waiver of data exclusivity. If an excluded country uses compulsory licensing for importation or production, domestic legal discretion to avoid enforcement of data exclusivity would be critical to ensure that regulatory approval is not delayed, potentially for many years depending on a term of data exclusivity in the country.
CONCLUSION
AND RECOMMENDATIONS
Gilead’s
license includes a number of restrictions, ambiguities and exclusions
that undermine access to low-cost generic HCV medicines in developing
countries. These legal restrictions will limit scale up for access to
DAAs and lead to artificially high prices for patients, treatment
providers and governments around the world.
To
ensure low-cost access to these key DAAs in all low- and
middle-income countries, MSF makes the following recommendations:
- Gilead and its licensees should publish the actual, executed license agreements signed for all the three DAAs with a sufficient and clear patent landscape affecting countries of concern, and provide it to stakeholders on request.
- Gilead should expand the scope of the license to include all low- and middle-income countries, or at least to include developing countries with a high burden of HCV, including Iran, Ukraine, Thailand, China and Brazil.
- Gilead should abandon its anti-diversion programme for its branded product and stop mandating implementation of the anti-diversion programme by its licensees.
- The broad and excessive definitions of patents should be modified to only include granted patents, and exclude pending patent applications or pending appeals to rejected applications. Method of use or manufacture should be excluded from the product patent definition. Gilead should revise its definitions of patents, and ensure they are aligned with the definition under the World Trade Organization’s TRIPS Agreement, regardless of whether a compulsory license can be issued on a pending patent.
- Article 10.3 (d) of the license should be rewritten to clarify that Clause Z of the license only relates to 10.3 (d)(ii).
- The termination of the license should be available upon notice provided by the licensees.
- Gilead should establish a clear obligation and schedule of product registration in developing countries.
- Gilead should issue a clear waiver of data exclusivity for all low- and middle-income countries where data exclusivity may apply.
- Gilead should not prevent licensees from selling APIs to any company outside of the license and should allow licensees to source APIs from any appropriate supplier.
- Gilead should publish a full and comprehensive patent landscape for all three DAAs in all low- and middle-income countries, and refrain from evergreening through the filing of serial patent applications.
8
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