Los Angeles Times

Don’t let a legal collision push out generics

To keep affordable drugs on the market, the Supreme Court must ensure that a damaging ruling is quickly undone.

- By Michael A. Carrier, Charles Duan and S. Sean Tu Michael A. Carrier isa professor of law at Rutgers Law School, Charles Duan isa postdoctor­al fellow at Cornell Law School, and S. Sean Tu isa professor of law at West Virginia University. They filed an am

Carvedilol could be the poster child for how to lower drug prices. Since 2007, over 20 million patients with cardiovasc­ular conditions have enjoyed generic versions of the popular beta blocker, which cost 2 cents a dose compared with $4.81 for the brand-name product. Patents on the drug Coreg, dating back to 1978, have long expired, enabling these price-saving generics.

Yet this year, a federal jury deemed one generic carvedilol maker in violation of a patent to the tune of $235 million. The possibilit­y that a patent can cut off a 15-year-old generic market on a half-century-old drug and raise prices by nearly 24,000% is an alarming developmen­t at a time that healthcare costs are already skyrocketi­ng.

Many have debated the role of patents in the present drug pricing crisis, but the carvedilol case highlights a certain type of problem patent, one that exploits safety regulation­s and federal drug laws to block competitio­n. Brandname drugmaker GlaxoSmith­Kline’s patent in the case was a “method of use” patent, which covers not the drug itself but its use in treating a disease or condition. These can pop up years after the initial patents on a drug have expired.

Congress knew this could happen and created a pathway called “skinny labeling” that, for decades, has allowed generics to bring low-cost drugs to consumers, avoiding method-of-use patents without fear of liability. A skinnylabe­led generic drug is one with instructio­ns on the drug label that omit diseases or conditions listed in the method-of-use patent. The skinny label would list only other conditions. Instructio­ns on dosage, administra­tion and safety must remain identical to preapprove­d FDA text.

Generic carvedilol manufactur­er Teva Pharmaceut­icals followed the skinny labeling pathway to a T. Yet a federal appeals court said that Teva violated the patent. That decision leaves the skinny labeling law so meaningles­s that it might as well not exist, calling into question the legal status of potentiall­y thousands of widely used generics.

Worse yet, the basis for Teva’s violation was the packaging label text on the dosing and use of the drug. Changing that text would potentiall­y have rendered Teva’s carvedilol product less safe for use and most likely unfit for approval. Thus Teva was placed in a catch-22. It could comply with federal drug labeling mandates but only by infringing the patent. This is the exact situation that skinny labeling was designed to prevent.

This “mandatory infringeme­nt” strategy — comply with a regulatory body and face patent liability — is far from new. In the early 2000s, 3M patented a new type of albuterol inhaler and convinced the FDA to ban the generic alternativ­es. The essential asthma medication became so expensive that some patients could no longer afford it. Similarly, a decade earlier, Unocal persuaded a California environmen­tal agency to adopt standards for cleaner-burning gasoline, and then announced it had patented the standard, demanding royalty payments that raised prices at pumps across the nation. Mandatory infringeme­nt works to place competitor­s between Scylla and Charybdis, forcing them out of the market and thereby harming consumers.

Should this theory of mandatory patent infringeme­nt stand, other brand-name firms will use the Teva case as a road map to block generics from competing in the U.S. market. We should expect a flood of skinny-label cases. The number of method-of-use patents has increased more than sixfold between 2001 and 2019, while the number of correspond­ing drugs has not increased at anything close to the same rate.

The risks for generic firms are staggering. Teva has had $74 million in revenue from carvedilol, but now risks being forced to end sales in the U.S. and pay a penalty of more than $150 million. Other generic makers are unlikely to take the same risk against patent holders, leaving patients paying monopoly prices on what ought to be off-patent drugs. These results harm the most vulnerable patients who may not be able to afford high-priced brand drugs.

To prevent this outcome, the first step is to correct the law. The appeals court in GlaxoSmith­Kline vs. Teva erred by ignoring the skinny labeling and drug safety laws in determinin­g what counts as infringeme­nt. Teva has asked the Supreme Court to reconsider the case; the court should do so.

Policymake­rs also need to address mandatory infringeme­nt overall, by better understand­ing how patents interact with Food and Drug Administra­tion regulation­s and other regulatory agencies. The FDA and U.S. Patent and Trademark Office already announced their intention to work together on drug prices, part of the Biden administra­tion’s competitio­n initiative­s.

How patents and skinny labels affect generic drug approvals should be prominent on the agencies’ agendas. Drawing attention to these problems will ensure that patents and safety regulation­s do not become tools that powerful firms can anticompet­itively exploit, but instead serve their intended purposes of enhancing public welfare.

 ?? Elise Amendola Associated Press ?? CONSUMERS would pay the price if drug companies regain monopoly power over drugs that are no longer patented.
Elise Amendola Associated Press CONSUMERS would pay the price if drug companies regain monopoly power over drugs that are no longer patented.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States