Lake County Record-Bee

The FTC is attacking drugmakers' `patent thickets'

- By Elisabeth Rosenthal

The Federal Trade Commission has challenged the validity of over 100 drug product patents, focusing on devices used to deliver medicines, like inhalers and autoinject­ors, in an effort to increase competitio­n and potentiall­y lower some prices.

The FTC says drugmakers illegitima­tely use the patents to prevent competitor­s from offering cheaper generic alternativ­es.

It's the first time the FTC has tried the tactic, said Hannah Garden-Monheit, director of the FTC's Office of Policy Planning.

“We are using all the tools we have to bring down drug prices and reduce barriers to generic competitio­n,” she said in an interview.

President Joe Biden has instructed his Federal Trade Commission to be more aggressive in reining in the pharmaceut­ical industry. Under its chairperso­n, Lina Khan, the agency is aggressive­ly testing the limits of its powers in pursuit of that goal.

The targeted patents cover devices that propel medicines for asthma and emphysema into the lungs or inject epinephrin­e to treat a severe allergic attack. Drugmakers list them in the FDA's “Orange Book,” which can afford the products greater protection from generic competitio­n.

Many of the medicines delivered by the devices are decades old, years off patent. But manufactur­ers have long tweaked the delivery methods, patenting the changes, in ways that sometimes make the drugs more convenient to administer.

They might, for example, change the propellant in an inhaler or add a counter that tells a patient how many doses are left. Autoinject­ors mean patients don't see a needle or syringe but merely press a device with a hidden needle against the skin to deliver

the medicine. Some autoinject­ors even talk patients through the process.

Though there has long been a procedure for disputing the validity of Orange Book-listed patents, it is rarely used.

In challengin­g Orange Book listings, the FTC is trying to cut away at what are known as patent thickets. While a single patent once would cover a single active medicine, many drugs today are protected by half a dozen patents or more, creating additional obstacles for cheaper generics seeking to enter the market.

The move is critically important because drugmakers frequently extend the 20-year patent protection of a drug by changing the delivery

device or method. For example, instead of a pill, they make a capsule. Or instead of a dose every six hours, they create a longer-acting, once-a-day version. They can also alter the process by which a drug is made — socalled “process patents.”

Each tweak gets a new patent, which the manufactur­er then adds to its official compendium of drug patents. There is no advance scrutiny of listings by regulators.

Generic drugmakers wishing to make a copycat version of a branded drug generally have to challenge the patents in court. But merely listing a patent in the Orange Book automatica­lly triggers a 2½-year delay of FDA approval of a litigating

generic competitor.

The FTC says patent law protects active ingredient­s, not delivery methods.

The pharmaceut­ical industry, already battling the Biden administra­tion's plan to negotiate prices of some drugs for Medicare patients, says it wants more clarity about which aspects of its products can be patented.

“The underlying statute is not clear about listing certain types of drug delivery device patents, and the industry has long asked for the FDA to provide guidance,” said Megan Van Etten, a spokespers­on for Pharmaceut­ical Research and Manufactur­ers of America, the industry trade group, in an email. “We're disappoint­ed that the FTC has characteri­zed

companies as acting inappropri­ately rather than help seek the clarity the industry needs to ensure compliance.”

After an FTC challenge, companies have 30 days to withdraw or amend the patent or show it is valid. Some have already backed down.

“We've had some significan­t wins,” Garden-Monheit said. After the FTC's challenge, drugmaker GSK, formerly GlaxoSmith­Kline, withdrew all patents on two popular inhalers for asthma, Advair and Flovent, both of which contained old off-patent medicines but nonetheles­s cost hundreds of dollars. Amneal Pharmaceut­icals withdrew patents on its epinephrin­e injector.

Still, the deadline for companies to respond to the first set of warning letters has passed and only about 30% of those that received them answered, leaving the commission to ponder its next steps. The FTC could take a drugmaker to court to seek a cease-and-desist order.

And Garden-Monheit said the agency is poised to look at other types of patents that may be invalid, which pile up to add to the thicket. There are thousands of patents in the Orange Book.

“We are taking a close and active look at this,” Garden-Monheit said. “Companies who haven't received a letter from us challengin­g a patent shouldn't think they're off the hook.”

 ?? TERO VESALAINEN — DREAMSTIME/TNS ?? The FTC says drugmakers illegitima­tely use patents to prevent competitor­s from offering cheaper generic alternativ­es.
TERO VESALAINEN — DREAMSTIME/TNS The FTC says drugmakers illegitima­tely use patents to prevent competitor­s from offering cheaper generic alternativ­es.

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