Consumer group says drugmakers abuse U.S. patent system to keep prices
high
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[September 17, 2022]
By Ahmed Aboulenein
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Makers of the top selling drugs in the United
States are costing patients billions of dollars and worsening a drug
pricing crisis by abusing the U.S. patent system to stifle competition
and inflate prices, a consumer group said on Thursday.
The New York-based Initiative for Medicines, Access & Knowledge (I-MAK)
said in a report that three of the top 10 selling drugs in the U.S. face
no competition in the country and will cost Americans an estimated
further $167 billion before they are expected to so.
"U.S. prescription drug spending, which exceeds $400 billion today, is
projected to reach nearly a trillion dollars by 2030," said I-MAK, a
non-profit group of lawyers and scientists part funded by groups
critical of the pharmaceutical industry.
I-MAK said cheaper generic and biosimilar versions of Bristol-Myers
Squibb and Pfizer's blood clot preventer Eliquis, AbbVie's Humira, and
Amgen's Enbrel, both used to treat rheumatoid arthritis, will have been
available in Europe for an average of 7.7 years before their expected
U.S. launch.
AbbVie, Amgen, Bristol-Myers Squibb, and Pfizer, did not immediately
respond to requests for comment.
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Drugmakers have used
the practice of seeking multiple patents for minor variations on a
single invention, known as patent thickets, to stave off generic
competition for decades.
"Patent abuse is not limited to a few bad actors. A growing body of
evidence demonstrates that an essential part of the pharmaceutical
industry's business model for top-selling drugs is now built on
maintaining market control by exploiting an outdated patent system,"
the group said.
"Pharmaceutical companies secure hundreds of patents to block
competition because they can," the report concluded.
It called on lawmakers and government agencies to end patent
thickets and modernize the patent system.
Makers of the top ten selling drugs in the U.S. filed an average of
140 patent applications per drug, 66% of which followed U.S. Food
and Drug Administration approval, I-MAK said. An average of 74
patents were granted on each drug, four times as many patents than
in Europe.
The Swiss competition commission (COMCO) on Thursday opened an
investigation into Novartis over possible unlawful use of a patent
to reduce competitive pressure.
(Reporting by Ahmed Aboulenein; editing by Richard Pullin)
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