One in the eye for Pfizer glaucoma patent policy?
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Pharmaceutical patents are always controversial: see this Kat's post here on the heated arguments for and against the extension of the duration of pharmaceutical patents. Such debates raise the additional question: what can you do, if anything, when your valuable pharmaceutical patent is nearing that all important expiration date? The recent conduct of global pharmaceutical giant Pfizer in Italy provides an example of what not to do in these circumstances as its conduct was severely criticised by the Autorità Garante della Concorrenza e del Mercato (the Italian Competition Authority, ICA).
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On 11 January 2012 the ICA found that Pfizer had abused its dominant position: it fined Pfizer €10.6m and ordered it to stop the conduct referred to above. The decision (in Italian) was released recently. A press release issued by the ICA (in English) however stated:
'Thanks to its strategy, Pfizer managed to (i) increase the effective market entry costs for the manufacturers of generic drugs; (ii) delay the market entry of Xalatan-equivalent specialty drugs by at least 7 months; (iii) maintain the de facto exclusive commercialization of medicines based on latanoprost even after patent coverage had expired; (iv) cause an estimated 14 million euros in lost savings by the NHS [the Italian National Health Service - not the UK one]. These elements led the Authority to classify the sanctioned competitive violation as very serious'.
The IPKat wonders whether a €10.6m fine was the right level of punishment for this conduct: should it have been higher on account of the company's egregious activity or lower because Pfizer was only seeking to play the game by the available rules?
Merpel notes the complete condemnation by the ICA of Pfizer's actions -- which it viewed as a deliberate strategy to extend artificially the period of patent protection of not only Xatalan but its 'blockbuster' products. She asks should there be further investigation by the ICA of this conduct, and whether the Italian NHS should try to recoup some of the €14m it 'overpaid' to Pfizer?
This Kat thanks Antonio Selas of the PatLit blog fame for his translation of various sections of the ICA decision (this Kat finding that her university Italian was not always suited to the intricacies of a high level discussion of patents!)
Merpel notes the complete condemnation by the ICA of Pfizer's actions -- which it viewed as a deliberate strategy to extend artificially the period of patent protection of not only Xatalan but its 'blockbuster' products. She asks should there be further investigation by the ICA of this conduct, and whether the Italian NHS should try to recoup some of the €14m it 'overpaid' to Pfizer?
This Kat thanks Antonio Selas of the PatLit blog fame for his translation of various sections of the ICA decision (this Kat finding that her university Italian was not always suited to the intricacies of a high level discussion of patents!)