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A smiling Silvia Scalzini ... |
As patent law aficionados may know,
this Kat is not the ultimate commentator on patent law and life sciences
matters. However, she has recently been informed of interesting developments in
the regulation of off-label uses of pharmaceuticals in her native land, ie Italy.
"Off-label
uses of pharmaceutical drugs are currently at the centre of heated discussion
in Italy. Off-label uses are those uses for which drugs have not been
officially approved by drug regulators, eg different
therapeutic indications, patient age range or dose instructions [this
explanation was vital to this Kat to understand what Silvia was talking about]. Off-label uses frequently concern well-known
compounds for which “scientific evidence suggests their rational use in
clinical situations that have not been approved from a regulatory point of view”.
According
to Italian law, off-label uses of pharmaceuticals are permitted but very limited,
especially if there are alternative approved drugs available for the same
treatments. In essence, off-label uses are only allowed (and their price is
covered by the National Health Service - NHS):
· In the absence of an approved
therapeutic alternative;
· After inclusion by the Scientific
Technical Committee of the Italian Medicines Agency (IMA)
in a specific list.
Thus
it may happen that some off-label uses of pharmaceuticals, that are effective,
safe and cheaper than the alternative approved drugs, are de facto limited
(or hindered), with resulting harm to the public interest in terms of
access to therapies and high costs for the NHS.
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... And a slightly less confident copyright Kat when she is informed that her car is actually heading to a life sciences symposium |
This
problem has been highlighted in a recent decision by
the Italian Competition Authority (ICA) in Case I760 Roche-Novartis/Farmaci
Avastin e Lucentis.
The
ICA fined Roche and Novartis for over EUR180m, on grounds that they had
created a cartel for the sale of two major ophthalmic drugs, Avastin and
Lucentis. According to the ICA, the two companies put in place a “complex
collusive strategy” in order to exclude cheaper drug Avastin (approved for
treating some forms of cancer and used - off-label - in the ophthalmic field)
from the market, so to “channel demand towards the much more expensive drug
Lucentis”.
Avastin
was developed by Genentech, a subsidiary of Roche, and commercialised by
Genentech (in the US) and Roche (outside the US), pursuant to a
commercialisation agreement between the two undertakings.
Despite
the widespread off-label use of Avastin for ophthalmic purposes,
neither Genentech nor Roche have ever applied to register a
therapeutic indication in this field. Genentech later developed Lucentis,
(which contains “an active substance similar to Avastin’s”),
specifically intended for ophthalmic use.
By
virtue of a license and collaboration agreement, Lucentis
is marketed by Genentech (in the US) and by Novartis (outside
the US).
Because
valid alternative approved drugs for
the same treatment exist and evidence was published to challenge the
ophthalmological use of Avastin, off-label use of Avastin has been
progressively limited.
This
happened despite independent comparative studies supported the equivalence of
the two drugs in ophthalmic uses.
The
ICA found that Roche and Novartis colluded “to create an artificial product
differentiation and purport Avastin as more dangerous than Lucentis, in order
to influence prescriptions of medical doctors and health services” to
maximise their profits. Indeed, while Novartis benefited directly from Lucentis’
sales, Roche also received significant royalties through its subsidiary
Genentech.
According
to the ICA, this cartel prevented several patients from accessing the treatment
and resulted in additional expenses for the NHS.
In
the wake of this decision, on 20 March 2014 the Italian Government issued a Law Decree to
reform the rules for off-label uses of pharmaceutical drugs, and also improve
the overall efficiency of the system.
The
decree provides – within certain budgetary constrains – for the possibility of
an ex officio registration of therapeutic indications that
were not included in the original marketing authorisation for a drug for which,
however, there is a “justified public interest” in its use.
According
to the decree, where such a “justified public interest" is found,
the IMA can inform the marketing authorisation holder (ie the
patent holder or his successor in title) that it is possible to choose one of
the following options:
· To assign the rights on such indication to the Ministry of Health for free
for the sake of the “ex officio” registration process;
· To proceed directly at its own expense
to the registration of the indication, but defining the terms and mode for the
pivotal studies relating to the registration in agreement with IMA;
· To object the registration of the
indication in question.
If
the rightholder does object and the objection is not justified, the IMA will
give “adequate information” of such objection on its
institutional website.
According
to Italian Minister of Health Beatrice Lorenzin,
these rules are “respectful of phase II clinical trials, designed to protect
patients, respectful of the industrial property rights of the companies and
effective in allowing IMA temporarily to allow the off-label use of a drug even
before the conclusion of the second level of testing".
However,
despite the Minister’s efforts to balance different interests, the decree
raises some questions that should be clarified when this is transposed into law [this
must happen within 60 days from the publication of a law decree into the
Gazzetta Ufficiale]:
1. What
does “justified public interest” mean in regard to off-label uses of
drugs? What criteria should be adopted for determining it?
2. In case
of an “unjustified” objection to the registration of the therapeutic
indication by the rights-holder, what does “adequate information on the
institutional website of the IMA” mean? And would this rule have the
desired effect of encouraging the rights-holder to proceed (directly or
indirectly) to the registration of an off-label indication (for which it
previously had no commercial interest)? Would other measures be more effective?
To
know how this delicate balance between public and private interests will be
managed, we will have to await the outcome of Parliamentary debate on transposition
of the decree into law."
Interesting case - In the UK, Novartis applied for judicial review of the decision by the NHS to fund Avastin. Similar controversies happened in the US with Genentech offering secret rebates to opthalmologists for prescribing the more expensive Lucrentis - it cost Medicare over $537 million compared to only $20 million for Avastin injections.
ReplyDeleteThis highlights the lack of private incentives under the current patent system to fund clinical trials for cost-effective therapies.
Nothing to stop anyone going down the regulatory approval process for Avastin.
ReplyDeleteWhatever policies we might decide to adopt for off-label uses Roche and Novartis should not have colluded. Pharma companies seem unafraid of testing the boundaries, and they need to adopt a much more ethical behaviour.
ReplyDeleteThat's the point, SK!
ReplyDelete