Toronto Star

NAFTA 2.0 could raise drug costs

Provision would extend data protection to 10 years for biologics

- DANIEL DALE

WASHINGTON— A provision of the new NAFTA that could raise the cost of certain medication­s in Canada has emerged as one of the major obstacles to the agreement being approved in the United States. Some Democrats are demanding a change to a rule that would require the U.S., Canada and Mexico protect the intellectu­al property behind sophistica­ted and expensive biologics drugs for at least 10 years.

These Democrats, like Canada’s generic drug industry, warn that the new biologics rule would keep drug prices high by requiring citizens to wait longer before they can get their hands on lower-cost similar drugs known as biosimilar­s. Canada would have to change its current policy: Canada currently offers eight years of the “data protection.” The U.S. would not have to change anything: under a law signed by Democrat Barack Obama, the U.S. already offers 12 years of data protection.

Democrats oppose the 10-year minimum, however, because it would forbid them from reducing the U.S. protection period in the future. Former presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton and current members of Congress have called for a reduction to seven years, Obama’s own preference during the original negotiatio­ns.

“Last night, President Trump called on Democrats to work with him on prescripti­on-drug reform. He also asked us to support NAFTA 2.0. What he failed to say is that these things are fundamenta­lly at odds with each other,” Democratic Rep. Jan Schakowsky said in a state- ment after Tuesday’s State of the Union. “NAFTA 2.0, as written, will keep prescripti­on drug costs high, and Americans will get poorer and sicker as a result. Worse, it would tie Congress’ hands and prevent us from addressing the issue of drug costs.”

Sen. Elizabeth Warren, a presidenti­al candidate, said in a November speech that the agreement is “stuffed with handouts that will let big drug companies lock in the high prices they charge for many drugs.” In a Wednesday tweet, the top trade Democrat on the House Ways and Means Committee, Rep. Earl Blumenauer, said on Twitter, “Talking to other members, my strong first impression is that there’s a lot of work needed on access and cost of Rx drugs in NAFTA 2.0 to get committee support and House passage.”

Democrats have united in calling for additional language in the deal to allow stricter enforcemen­t of provisions on workers and on the environmen­t. The provision on biolog- ics is the only one whose existing language they have called to significan­tly change.

“The new U.S.-Mexico-Canada agreement strikes a balance between encouragin­g competitio­n and incentiviz­ing innovation, but does not impact U.S. law related to biopharmac­euticals,” a spokespers­on for PhRMA, the U.S. pharmaceut­ical industry group, said in an email.

Democrats may believe that they have politics on their side.

The Washington Post reported Thursday that focus groups conducted by a prominent Democratic pollster showed that working-class white voters who voted for Obama and then Trump were furious about the provision when it was raised, seeing it as an example of political capitulati­on to Big Pharma. The pollster, Stan Greenberg, said that discussing this item was the “single most powerful argument” against the trade deal, the Post reported.

Biologics, derived from living organisms, make up a growing percentage of the North American drug market.

During the period of data protection, data from the clinical trials conducted by the makers of the original drugs cannot be used by other companies in seeking approval for biosimilar­s. Because this data is costly to develop independen­tly, extending the protection period can have the effect of giving the original company a longer period alone on the market.

In some cases, it doesn’t: a drug’s patent period sometimes runs well beyond the data protection period. But in some cases where a drug takes a long time to develop, the protection period continues after the patent has elapsed, since the patent clock starts ticking much earlier in the process. Data protection also helps the original company in cases where a patent has been invalidate­d or has not been secured. Experts say it is too soon to know how much the change would cost Canadians if the trade agreement were implemente­d.

 ?? THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Some Democrats seek a change to a rule that would require the U.S., Canada and Mexico to protect the intellectu­al property behind sophistica­ted and expensive drugs for at least 10 years.
THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO Some Democrats seek a change to a rule that would require the U.S., Canada and Mexico to protect the intellectu­al property behind sophistica­ted and expensive drugs for at least 10 years.

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