Is there any piece of IP legislation which has given rise to
so much uncertainty, for so little good reason, as the SPC Regulation? This Regulation must surely hold the record for the number of court
cases taken and referrals made, relative to the modest number of rights actually granted under it.
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Illustration not based on detailed analysis. Not even based on real data |
The amount of litigation is even more astounding when you
consider that unlike the laws on trade marks, patents and designs, there are no
fine judgments to be made about issues like distinctiveness, obviousness
or individual character. The entire SPC system is supposed to be completely
administrative. Using a couple of easily determined dates, one should be able
to plug them into a formula which returns an answer as to how many days (if
any) extra protection should be granted to a patented pharmaceutical after
the patent expires.
And yet, the Regulation has proved so unsuited to its purpose that national courts and patent offices still
don’t know what the most basic criteria for SPC protection actually are, twenty years into the system's operation. This is not an exaggeration: just last month (as reported in the AdvoKat's post) Mr Justice Arnold’s pleaded with the Court of Justice
(CJEU) to again clarify what is meant by the fundamental requirement for SPC eligibility contained in the phrase “the product is protected
by a basic patent in force”. That question has been asked and answered before, but the CJEU's way of answering leaves patent lawyers, patent offices, and national courts scratching their collective heads and unable to apply the rulings in the real world.
Well, Arnold J has made another referral, in AstraZeneca
AB v Comptroller-General [2012] EWHC 2840 (Pat). To be fair to the legislators, this referral arises from a
situation which was not easily foreseen, but on the other hand, it arises
because of an alleged inconsistency between a number of earlier CJEU rulings on
SPCs.
The facts
1. AstraZeneca
obtained a Swiss marketing authorisation (MA) in 2004 for their drug “Iressa”.
2. This MA was
also automatically valid in Liechtenstein (and hence the EEA). Under the SPC
regime the date of the “first” MA, used to calculate if an SPC should be
granted and for how long it should last, can be that of an authorisation to
place the drug on the market in the EEA, not just in the EU.
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Iressa a.k.a. gefitinib |
3. The Swiss MA
in question was limited in duration and applied looser criteria than the EU
authorities required under the relevant Directives. To remain in force, the
Swiss authorities required better data within a time limit and when this did
not appear the MA was withdrawn, terminating its effect in Liechtenstein
also. (The original data was also
rejected by the EU authorities who refused to grant a corresponding MA).
4. Following
more clinical trials and better data AstraZeneca was ultimately granted a
European MA in 2009 and a new Swiss one in 2010.
5. It was
therefore legal in 2004-2005 to market Iressa in Liechtenstein, but nowhere
else in the EEA or EU. It was then illegal from 2005 until 2009 to market Iressa anywhere in the EU or EEA.Since 2009 the European MA has applied.
The questions referred
Which was the first MA?
The Comptroller regards the 2004 Swiss MA as the “first”
authorisation (giving AstraZeneca an SPC term a few months shy of three years).
This is in line with the CJEU decision in Novartis where the Court held
that a Swiss MA could trigger the SPC provisions due to its effect in
Liechtenstein and hence the EEA.
AstraZeneca argue that this MA did not trigger the SPC
provisions because in the Hässle decision the CJEU had held that the
only MA which will trigger an SPC is one granted in line with the relevant EU
Directives (which the Swiss MA was not). Also, the Synthon decision
stated that when a product is placed on the market without first having
received an EU-compliant MA, the product is outside the SPC system.
Accordingly, AstraZeneca argue, Novartis should be confined to its facts
or was wrongly decided.
If AstraZeneca are correct, they say the 2009 MA is the
triggering MA, giving them the maximum SPC term of five years.
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Three questions: word them very carefully |
Arnold J has therefore used his first two questions to address this point (rather like a hopeful castaway rubbing a genie's lamp and being granted three wishes which he wants to use to best effect and without being tricked by the genie) as follows:
"1. Is a Swiss marketing
authorisation not granted pursuant to the administrative authorisation
procedure laid down in Directive 2001/83/EC, but automatically recognised by
Liechtenstein, capable of constituting the 'first authorisation to place the
product on the market' for the purposes of Article 13(1) of Regulation
469/2009/EC?
2. Does it make a difference to
the answer to the first question if:
(a) the set of clinical data
upon which the Swiss authority granted the marketing authorisation was
considered by the European Medicines Agency as not satisfying the conditions
for the grant of a marketing authorisation pursuant to Regulation 726/2004/EC;
and/or
(b) the Swiss marketing authorisation
was suspended after grant and was only reinstated following the submission of
additional data?"
Arnold J has supplied the CJEU with his own suggested
answers: (1) yes, the Swiss MA was the “first authorisation”, and (2) no, the
circumstances make no difference.
In what the IPKat can only interpret as a frustration bred
by hard experience, Arnold J makes a final plea to the CJEU given the argued
conflict between earlier CJEU decisions:
“If, however, the Court of Justice decides
to overrule or qualify Novartis, I would request that it says so in
clear and unambiguous terms, in order to avoid the need for yet another
reference on this issue.”
Is the drug now disqualified entirely from SPC
protection?
The Synthon decision mentioned earlier has a possible implication which could be very unhelpful to AstraZeneca. The Court held that where a product which had been marketed in the Community without first having undergone the testing and regulatory approval required under EU Directives, then not only did the SPC Regulation not apply, but any SPC granted for that product was
invalid.
A similar finding was made in the Generics decision.
The implication, the Comptroller argued, was that
the compound in Iressa could now never be granted a valid SPC, having been marketed in the EEA
without having first received an EU-compliant MA.
Arnold J. therefore used his final rub on the genie's lamp as follows:
“3. If Article 13(1) of
Regulation 469/2009 refers solely to marketing authorisations granted pursuant
to the administrative authorisation procedure laid down in Directive
2001/83/EC, does the fact that a medicinal product was first placed on the
market within the EEA pursuant to a Swiss marketing authorisation automatically
recognised in Liechtenstein which was not granted pursuant to Directive
2001/83/EC render that product ineligible for the grant of a supplementary
protection certificate pursuant to Article 2 of Regulation 469/2009?"
Again, in case it helps, Mr Justice Arnold offers the CJEU his own view:
yes, the product is ineligible for any SPC protection, in line with the CJEU’s
decisions in Synthon and Generics but contrary to that in Neurim.
Final thoughts
Given the demonstrated inadequacy of many of the SPC
Regulation’s provisions, and the fact that so many of the answers coming back
from the CJEU simply beget more referrals, this Kat suggests a more radical
approach is needed.
Perhaps the EU should simply repeal the SPC Regulation,
preserving intact all rights granted to date, and rewrite the law to give the same protection as was intended previously, starting with
a blank sheet of paper, a healthy measure of hindsight, and a thorough
appreciation of the more common kinds of pharmaceutical patents, products,
claiming methods and infringement problems. One suspects that secretly Mr
Justice Arnold, along with many of his colleagues in the Courts and Patent
Offices throughout Europe, would agree. Do the IPKat's readers agree, or is the Regulation good enough as it stands?
The litigation re SPC reflects financial not legal considerations.
ReplyDeleteYour point being what, Michael?
ReplyDelete"Perhaps the EU should simply repeal the SPC Regulation, preserving intact all rights granted to date..."
ReplyDeleteInstead, why not rip the whole thing up and revoke all of the rights granted to date....?
I agree with the last comment. There is absolutely no need for SPCs with a patent term of 50 years! Bring it on!!! In fact, lets go for 70 years after death of the last surviving inventor.
ReplyDeleteFor those that don't believe in the pharma industry, like commentators 1 and 3, feel free to enjoy a range of old and modern diseases.