Times Colonist

Extended drug patents with EU deal will cost Canadians $392 million: PBO

- RAISA PATEL

OTTAWA — An extension of drugpatent protection­s in the CanadaEU free trade deal could end up costing Canadians an estimated $392 million a year, and federal coffers up to $270 million more annually, says a new report from the parliament­ary budget officer.

The report released on Thursday sets out to put a price tag on a central — and controvers­ial — element of the Comprehens­ive Economic and Trade Agreement, or CETA, that went into effect last September.

The federal legislatio­n that enacted the CETA deal added two years to the existing 20-year patent protection­s for drugs containing new medicinal ingredient­s, which accounted for about one-third of all patented drugs sold in 2015.

As a result, drug companies now enjoy a 22-year period of market exclusivit­y for eligible drugs before cheaper, generic versions can be produced and sold. Canadians spent $15.2 billion on patented drugs in 2015, said the review board responsibl­e for monitoring patented drug prices.

In the interim, the cost of pharmaceut­icals will only continue to go up, said Philip Bagnoli, a senior economist who helped compile the report.

“The higher drug prices are, which will go up in the future, the larger the gap is going to be between the patented price and the non-patented price,” Bagnoli said.

“Drug companies will tell you that developing drugs is getting more and more expensive over time.”

The estimated figures — based on 2015 data — are meant to provide an “illustrati­ve analysis” to study the potential impact of the two-year extension, the report said. None of the drugs on the market were eligible for the extension when it was granted last year.

The PBO’s cost figures don’t include the spending that would come from institutio­ns such as hospitals and long-term care facilities, which would cause the estimates to rise significan­tly — to more than $500 million a year in the case of consumers.

Most of the additional government expense would go toward provincial public drug programs, the report said.

Those costs, estimated at around $214 million a year, are borne by Ottawa under a commitment the former Conservati­ve government made with the provinces in 2013.

When the federal government first studied Canada’s patent laws, it was with the understand­ing that drug manufactur­ers would increase research and developmen­t conducted within the country, Bagnoli said.

“Drug companies promised us they would do a lot more research in Canada in exchange for patent protection,” he said.

“They haven’t lived up to that.”

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