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MR-136E
PATENT DEDICATION AND THE PATENTED
MEDICINE PRICES REVIEW BOARD
Prepared by Margaret Smith
Law and Government Division
23 November 1995
TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
PATENT
DEDICATION DECISION
A. Number of Dedications
B. Authority of the Board
PATENT DEDICATION AND THE PATENTED
MEDICINE PRICES REVIEW BOARD
INTRODUCTION
The
Patented Medicine Prices Review Board (the "Board" or the "PMPRB") was
established in 1987 pursuant to amendments to the Patent Act. The PMPRB is an
independent quasi-judicial body whose mandate is to: (1) ensure that the prices charged by
patentees for patented drug products are not excessive; (2) report annually on pricing
trends in the pharmaceutical industry; and (3) report annually on the ratios of research
and development (R&D) expenditures to sales for individual patentees and for the
entire pharmaceutical sector.
The Board
reviews the prices of patented medicines sold for human or veterinary use, but not of
drugs for which there are no Canadian patents or of generic drugs sold under compulsory
licence. The Board reviews the price at which a patentee sells the patented medicine. This
is usually the "factory-gate" price to the wholesaler or to a hospital or
pharmacy. Retail prices are not subject to the Board's jurisdiction.
When
determining whether the price of a patented medicine is excessive, the Board is required
to consider the factors set out in the Patent Act. These include:
the prices at which the
medicine in question and medicines in the same therapeutic class are sold in Canada and in
other countries named in regulations made pursuant to the Patent Act (Germany,
France, Italy, Switzerland, Sweden, the United Kingdom and the United States);
On 15 February
1993, further amendments to the Patent Act came into force. Among other things,
they provided the Board with new remedies and powers in relation to excessive prices.
If the Board
finds that a medicine has been sold at an excessive price, it can order a price reduction.
The Board can also order a further reduction in order to recapture any excess revenue that
a patentee may have earned as a result of charging excessive prices. Excess revenues can
also be recouped through payments to the Crown. Moreover, if the Board finds that there
has been a policy of selling a medicine at an excessive price, it can order a patentee to
reduce the price or pay a penalty amounting to twice the excess revenues estimated to have
been derived from the excessive price.
Since the
inception of the Board, there has been a marked increase in the number of drug products
whose patents have been "dedicated." This is the term used to describe a patent
whose patentee has surrendered its proprietary interest and dedicated that interest to the
Canadian public by so notifying the Commissioner of Patents. Through the act of
dedication, a patentee relinquishes its exclusive ownership of the patent and, presumably,
its ability to sue other persons for patent infringement. Although the Patent Act
does not recognize or provide for a process whereby patents can be dedicated, dedication
has been practised in Canada for many years.
Until
recently, the Board ceased reviewing the price of a patented medicine whose patent or
patents had been dedicated. In 1995, in view of the increasing number of dedications of
pharmaceutical patents, the Board changed this policy, believing that some dedications had
been made to avoid the Boards jurisdiction. These notes will review the Boards
recent policy statements with respect to patent dedications and the events leading to
these statements.
PATENT DEDICATION DECISION
In January,
1995, the Board published for notice and comment a proposal that it would no longer cease
to review prices after dedication of a patent (Patented Medicine Prices Review Board, Bulletin,
Issue No. 15, January 1995). The Boards decision on patent dedication was published
in October 1995 (Bulletin, Issue No.17).
Thirty-eight
stakeholders provided comments to the Board. Generally, consumer groups, provincial
ministries of health and associations representing pharmacists, doctors, nurses and
hospitals expressed their approval of the proposal. The patented drug manufacturers and,
interestingly, the generic pharmaceutical industry opposed the proposal. The Canadian Drug
Manufacturers Association, representing the generic sector, was opposed in part because it
felt the proposal would discourage patentees from dedicating patents and thereby adversely
affect generic competition.
A. Number of Dedications
Between 1969 and
mid-1995, 637 patents applying to a variety of products were dedicated for public use.
Pharmaceutical companies had dedicated 449 (71% of the total), of which 447 (99.6% of
these dedications) had taken place since 1988, the first full year of operation of the
PMPRB. Board statistics further revealed that pharmaceutical patents represented about 1%
of the dedications prior to the creation of the Board, but 93% thereafter.
It should be
noted that there may be several patents pertaining to one drug product. The well over 400
patent dedications by pharmaceutical companies relate to a smaller number of actual drug
products. Data from the Board indicate that from 1989 to the end of 1994, 136 drug
products had been dedicated.
Further research
by the Board reveals that this rash of dedications of pharmaceutical patents appears to be
taking place only in Canada, in spite of the fact that other jurisdictions (such as the
United States, the United Kingdom and Australia), unlike Canada, have patent legislation
that specifically authorizes the practice of dedication.
An analysis of
the 136 dedicated drug products reveals that at least 43 of them had been priced above the
Boards pricing guidelines for some period prior to the actual expiry date of the
patent following dedication. The Board estimates that the practice of patent dedication in
the pharmaceutical sector has cost Canadian society some $39.9 million for the five and
one-half year period from 1 January 1989 to 1 July 1995 (see table below).
Estimated Costs to Society of Patent
Dedication in Canada
1989 |
$217,457.00 |
1990 |
$1,518,936.00 |
1991 |
$2,232,793.00 |
1992 |
$7,478,645.00 |
1993 |
$11,390,481.00 |
1994 |
$11,203,929.00 |
1995 (Jan. 1-July, 1) |
$5,837,237.00 |
Total |
$39,879,478.00 |
Source: PMPRB, Bulletin,
Issue No. 17, p. 6.
B. Authority of the Board
The
Boards policy of ceasing to review the prices of a patented medicine after its
patents have been dedicated was stated in its Fourth Annual Report For the Year ended
December 31, 1991: "In the event that a Canadian patentee should dedicate a
patent pertaining to a drug product to the public domain, the relevant drug product ceases
to be subject to price review by the Patented Medicine Prices Review Board" (p. 6).
The issue of
patent dedication came to the fore in 1992 when the PMPRB issued its first Notice of
Hearing in connection with the drug Activase. Shortly after the Board initiated price
review proceedings in respect of Activase, the patent holders, Genetech Inc. and Genetech
Canada Inc., dedicated the patents for Activase to the public domain and filed a motion
with the Board disputing the PMPRBs jurisdiction on the grounds that Activase was no
longer a patented medicine. In its August 1992 decision in this matter, the Board stated
its concerns about using patent dedication to avoid price review:
The Board
therefore does not accept the argument that it was Parliaments intention to permit
medicine patentees to abuse their patent rights by charging excessive prices and then,
once the regulatory machinery created by Parliament to provide a public remedy is
activated, to avoid those regulatory consequences by dedicating the relevant patents.
Subsequently,
the Board obtained independent legal advice to the effect that the dedication of a patent
does not eliminate the Boards jurisdiction over a patentee because the Patent Act
does not specifically provide for the dedication of patents for public use.
While the Patent
Act confers rights on pharmaceutical patentees, it also confers obligations, including
the obligations imposed by the regulatory scheme established in sections 79 to 101.
Although a patentee may choose not to exercise its rights, it cannot unilaterally avoid
its obligations. The Patent Act provides several ways in which a patent may be
terminated before the normal expiry of the patent term; patent dedication is not one of
them....
The
Boards jurisdiction over a patentee of a dedicated patent extends until the expiry
of the patents term, or at least until the happening of one of the events by which
the Act removes the rights and benefits of the patent granted. (Bulletin, Issue No.
17, p. 7-8)
Effective 30
January 1995, the Board began to assert its continuing jurisdiction after the dedication
of a patent until either the expiration of the patents term or the cancellation or
surrender of a patent in accordance with the Patent Act, whichever comes first
(i.e., dedication does not affect jurisdiction). This assertion of jurisdiction may well
reduce the number of pharmaceutical patents that are dedicated. It may also be open to
legal challenge by patentees.
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