Date: 28 January 2011
Source: keionline.org
Geneva, Licenses just agreed between three generic
manufacturers and pharmaceutical company Tibotec, owned by Johnson & Johnson,
will keep a promising new AIDS medicine out of the hands of many patients
across the developing world, the international medical humanitarian
organization Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) said today. The licenses
exclude many developing countries where Johnson &
Johnson/ Tibotec will likely charge high prices. Other precise
restrictions introduced by the
agreement must be scrutinised carefully.
Tibotec has licensed production of the antiretroviral medicine rilpivirine to
one South African and two Indian manufacturers, but has limited the geographic
scope of the licenses such that all of Latin America, Central Asia and most
Caribbean and South East Asian countries will not be able to receive generic
versions of the medicine. Given the restrictive licensing, these countries may
not be able to import generic versions from India even if they override patents
in their countries through compulsory licenses.
In Brazil, Tibotec charges more than $6,000 per patient per year for another AIDS
medicine, darunavir, and a license it has agreed for Africa has led to a price
tag of more than $1,000 per patient per year for the same drug, nearly eight
times more than the recommended standard triple combination. Rilpivirine is
also likely to be priced high in developing countries not covered by the new
licenses.
While it`s
encouraging to see Tibotec is thinking about access to this drug for patients
in sub-Saharan Africa, it`s very unfortunate that the company has chosen to be
restrictive and discriminatory by issuing licenses that
look more like a franchise than actual generic competition,? said Dr. Tido von
Schoen-Angerer, Executive Director of MSF?s Campaign for
Access to Essential Medicines.
Licenses are urgently needed to allow production of affordable generic versions
of newer AIDS medicines because new medicines
have increasingly been granted patents in key generics producing countries such
as India, as required by international trade rules. MSF has supported
both the use of compulsory licensing and a fair
voluntary licensing mechanism through the establishment of the Medicines Patent
Pool, because voluntary licenses between companies, such as the ones offered by
Tibotec this week, have typically been too restrictive.
MSF has written to the CEOs of Johnson & Johnson and other companies that produce
AIDS medicines, asking them to put their patents in to the newly-established
Medicines Patent Pool. The Patent Pool mechanism would allow any number of
generic manufacturers to produce more affordable versions and fixed-dose
combinations that combine two or more medicines into one pill. Unlike this
limited Tiobtec license, the licenses the Patent Pool received from the US
National Institutes of Health related to Tibotec`s HIV medicine darunavir
included all developing countries, in line with the Patent Pool`s aim.
It is easy to make voluntary licenses work for commercial interests? the challenge
is making them work for both commercial and public health needs so we can
tackle the AIDS epidemic,? said von Schoen-Angerer. ? We urge Johnson &
Johnson to establish better license conditions and include its patents in
the Patent Pool.?
MSF relies upon affordable generic medicines to provide AIDS treatment to 160,000
people across the developing world. Affordable generic medicines have
played a major role in scaling up AIDS treatment to more than five million
people in developing countries, but a further ten million people in urgent need
of AIDS medicines are still waiting.
Keywords: AIDS / Johnson & Johnson / MSF
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