Business World

EU lawmakers vote to extend exclusivit­y period for new medicines

-

LAWMAKERS in a European Union (EU) parliament­ary committee on Tuesday voted to extend the exclusivit­y period for new medicines compared to an initial draft, seeking to address concerns expressed across the bloc’s pharma industry as part of a wider regulatory overhaul.

Committee members adopted the draft position published earlier this month before a final plenary vote scheduled for April 11 by a large majority.

Lawmakers will then need to strike a deal with member states which have not yet agreed on a joint stance.

The EU Parliament aims to set baseline data protection to 7.5 years with one extra year of incentives if the medication meets unmet needs, and if clinical trials are held in the EU.

This is softer than the EU Commission’s initial proposal to reduce the period to six years, from eight currently, to boost competitio­n as European pharmaceut­ical research and developmen­t is falling behind non-European rivals according to critics.

The new legislatio­n aims to slash the time it takes to approve new medicine, incentiviz­e production of medicines for antibiotic-resistant bacteria, improve patient access and “future-proof” the rules to account for technologi­cal leaps like artificial intelligen­ce.

But Europe’s pharmaceut­ical industry has been critical of the proposal. At issue is the new linking of a medicine’s exclusivit­y period to access across all 27 member states, where the length of approval can vary by years.

According to the draft voted by lawmakers on Tuesday, a company would also receive three years of market protection from generics, taking the total exclusivit­y period to a maximum 11.5 years, down slightly from 12 years initially proposed by the Commission. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines