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Unit 8: Legal Environment




          5.   Addition to a new provision to circumscribe rights in respect of mailbox applications, so  Notes
               that patent rights in respect of the mailbox shall be available only from the date of grant
               of patent and not retrospectively from the date of publication.
          6.   Strengthening the provisions relating to national  security to guard against  patenting
               abroad of dual use technologies.
          7.   Clarification of the provision relating to patenting of software related inventions when
               they have technical application to industry or are in combination with hardware.

          8.   Rationalisation of provision relating to time-lines with a view to introducing flexibility
               and reducing the processing time for patent application and simplifying and rationalising
               procedures.
          9.   The government has the power to acquire a patent for national requirement.
          10.  Polymorphs new forms of older drugs are patentable.

          11.  Parallel imports are allowed.
          12.  Local production is mandatory.

          13.  The earlier provision of 'new use' criteria is modified to 'mere new use'.
          14.  Transfer of cases from High Courts to the Appellate Board (S.117G.)

          8.2.3  Issues of Concern

          Incrementally Modified Drugs (Ever Greening): Incrementally Modified Drugs (IMDs) include
          new formulations, new combinations of active ingredients or new salts or esters of approved
          compound. In the US brand manufacturers have flooded the market with IMDs, which "in 85% of
          the cases, do not provide significant improvement over currently marketed therapies" (National
          Institute  for Health  Care Management, Changing  Patterns  of  Pharmaceutical  innovation:
          A Research Report, May 2002, p5).
          In the pharmaceutical sector it is very common to file a patent application for already known
          molecules by claiming trivial improvements. This naturally extends their monopoly even after
          the expiry of the original patent. This process is often referred to as ever greening. Ever greening
          of pharmaceuticals patents is a problem that India would have to grapple with in the near future,
          when the product applications that are currently in 'mailbox' are examined.


                 Example: In the mailbox there are nearly  12,000 product patent applications,  which
          would have to be examined according to the provision of the recently amended act. It is to be
          noted that between 1995 and 2003, only 274 new  chemicals entities were granted  marketing
          approvals by the US Federal Drug Administration (FDA).
          This implies that an overwhelming majority of the applications in the 'mailbox' cover IMDs.
          According to a report of the US National Institute of Healthcare and Medicines (NHCM), drug
          manufacturers patent a wide range of inventions connected with incremental modifications of
          their products, including minor features such as  inert ingredients and the form, colour and
          scoring of tables. In some cases, these patents may discourage generic companies from trying to
          develop a competitive product. In others, the generic company may be able to design around the
          new features.

          In such conditions, it is necessary for  developing countries like India to limit  the scope  of
          patentability  only  to  new  chemical entities  so  as  to  ensure  accessibility, availability  and
          affordability of medicines.




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