By Kevin E. Noonan —
The principal debate involving follow-on biologics
legislation has revolved around the length of the data exclusivity term granted
to innovators. The bill voted out
of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee earlier this year has
a 12-year data exclusivity term, which is shorter than the term supported by
industry groups such as the Biotechnology Industry Organization (BIO) and also
shorter than the term supported by the only peer-reviewed economic analysis of
record. There have been many
competing proposals, including a 7-year term supported by the Obama
administration (see "White House Recommends 7-Year Data Exclusivity Period for Follow-on Biologics"); a 5-year term provided in a bill (H.R. 1427) supported by Committee
on Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Henry Waxman (D-CA) in the House of
Representatives (see "Waxman Introduces Follow-on Biologics Bill"); and finally the grant of no data exclusivity under a set of
questionable assumptions promulgated by the Federal Trade Commission (see "No One Seems Happy with Follow-on Biologics According to the FTC"). Most recently, a pair of patent
attorneys (one of whom has deep ties to the generic pharmaceutical industry) and
a medical school professor proposed a 5-year data exclusivity term in an
article published in last week's New
England Journal of Medicine (see "NEJM Authors Say Five Years of Data Exclusivity Would Be Sufficient").
Under these circumstances, an article published in
this latest issue of Science is rather
surprising. The article, by Matthew
J. Higgins of the Georgia Institute of Technology and Stuart J.H. Graham of the
University of California, Berkeley Law School suggests that the current
Hatch-Waxman regime having a 5-year data exclusivity term and provisions for
generic drug companies to challenge innovator drug patents is responsible for
the dramatic drop-off in new small molecule drugs (from an average of 35 in 1996–2001
to 20 in 2002–07), and that the solution is to increase (indeed,
double) the data exclusivity term for conventional drugs to 10 years,
consistent with trends in Europe, Canada, and Japan (see "Balancing Innovation and Access: Patent Challenges Tip the Scales").
The authors start by reviewing the economic
incentives for generic drug challenges to innovator drug patents. The biggest factor is the 180-day exclusivity period awarded to the generic challenger that is the first to file
an Abbreviated New Drug Application (ANDA). The authors estimate that the average revenue garnered by a
generic during this period is $60 million, which is 12 times the average cost
of ANDA litigation ($5 million). This
differential exists because during that 6-month period the first successful generic challenger can price
the generic substitute just below the brand-name drug price (representing a "savings"
to consumers). This potential
windfall has motivated generic companies to engage in "prospecting"
by filing numerous ANDAs with Paragraph IV certifications (that the patent
protecting the innovator's drug is invalid). This conclusion is supported by a review of the number of
ANDA lawsuits filed over the past ten years:

A total of 749 lawsuits
have been filed challenging innovator drug patents during this period,
involving 243 brand-name drugs. The authors note that the
FTC has shown that "72% of Paragraph IV challenges filed between 1992 and
2000 resulted in litigation, with the generic drug challenger winning 42% of the time,"
citing Generic Entry Prior to Patent Expiration: An
FTC Study (FTC, Washington, DC, 2002). Moreover, the drugs challenged in recent years have
revenues of less than $100 million, showing that "blockbuster" drugs
are no longer the only targets of Paragraph IV challenges.
The economic effect on innovator drug companies is
large, averaging about a 12% loss in revenue. This loss "exceeded companies' gains from the patent
extensions awarded to them," according to the authors, an outcome that is
ironic considering the policy "balance" of the Hatch-Waxman regime between reducing the time needed for
a generic drug to reach the market after innovator patent expiry and
restoration of patent term lost to the period of regulatory review. Using Merck's Fosamax as an example,
the authors state that Teva's successful Paragraph IV challenge permitted
generic competition 4 years before Merck's patents were to expire, costing the
company about $1.5 billion. (Teva
is reported to have 160 pending ANDA filings and to be involved in 92 Paragraph
IV challenges, "putting at risk over $100 billion in sales," citing
Teva's Securities and Exchange Commission Form 20-F filing in 2007.) This lost revenue represents the cost of bringing two new
drugs to market in the U.S.
As a result, innovator pharmaceutical companies are
motivated to produce new branded drug offerings that bolster their existing
franchises subject to generic challenge. However, these are not "new" drugs, but rather are
predominantly reformulations representing only "marginal improvements"
over existing forms of these drugs. The rate and number of successful Paragraph IV challenges is also
reducing the average effective patent life for innovator drugs, particularly "blockbuster"
drugs which remain the most attractive targets for Paragraph IV challenge (and the correspondingly higher value
of the 180-day generic exclusivity term).
The authors suggest as a solution changing the data
exclusivity term under the Hatch-Waxman act from 5 years to 10 years, using a
comparison with other "Western" countries as justification:
Citing Professor
Grabowski's research, as well as a report from the National Academies of
Science and Engineering and the Institutes of Medicine (Rising
Above the Gathering Storm: Energizing and Employing America for a Brighter Economic
Future
(National Academies Press, Washington, DC, 2007), the authors assert that extending the period of data
exclusivity is necessary to overcome the "market failure" in the
pharmaceutical industry caused by
the Hatch-Waxman Paragraph IV challenges of patents on innovator drugs. While they also suggest other
regulatory incentives for drug development in particular areas (such as
Alzheimer's disease and osteoarthritis), "[a]t a minimum, we should all note that Paragraph
IV challenges are contributing to this failure when discussing the future of
health care and long-term access to new treatment."
The irony of this report will not be lost on anyone following
the data exclusivity period debate over
follow-on biologics, and the authors' conclusions provide a direct
challenge to those advocating a shortened term for biologic drugs based on the "successes"
of the Hatch-Waxman regime for small molecule drugs.

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