Edwards Lifesciences hit with Meril's EU antitrust complaint
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[May 14, 2024]
By Foo Yun Chee
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - U.S. heart valve maker Edwards Lifesciences has
been hit with an EU antitrust complaint by Indian rival Meril including
for allegedly anti-competitive practices related to patents, a move that
could bolster EU regulators' scrutiny of Edwards.
Regulators on both sides of the Atlantic have recently taken a tougher
line against the pharmaceutical industry to ensure that smaller
innovative companies can compete with bigger rivals and that prices for
drugs and products remain affordable.
Meril has filed a complaint with the European Commission, the company
told Reuters. The two companies have for years sparred over heart valve
patents in various courts around the world.
Edwards, a global leader known for its transcatheter aortic valve
replacement (TAVR) device in heart surgery, was raided by the EU
antitrust watchdog last year on concerns that it may have abused its
market power in breach of the bloc's antitrust rules.
Meril's complaint singled out Edwards' global unilateral pro-innovation
(anti-copycat) policy which it alleged aims to prevent doctors from
engaging with anyone Edwards labels as a patent copier.
The Indian company also took issue with Edwards' patent practices which
it said include evergreening - when firms extend patents on their
products by making slight changes to a compound - and patent thickets,
which refer to a pharma company's practice of seeking multiple patents
for minor variations on a single invention.
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Edwards rejected Meril's
allegations, saying it has fairly secured injunctions against
Meril's Myval system in 7 countries and the Unified Patent Court for
the infringement of its SAPIEN valve and accessory patents.
It said it asserted its patents against Meril
because "it substantially copied Edwards' technology, rather than
competing fairly and designing their own technologies".
"Intellectual property rights are essential to protect and
incentivise innovations like those in Edwards' therapies, which save
and transform the lives of millions of patients across the world,"
Edwards said in an email to Reuters.
"We have an unwavering commitment to healthy, fair competition and
we believe that Meril's complaint to the European Commission is
designed to circumvent competition and the decisions of national
courts," it said.
Edwards in a February regulatory filing said the Commission is
investigating certain business practices including its anti-copycat
policy and patent practices.
Meril's complaint said Edwards has launched a disparagement campaign
with incomplete information on its intellectual property status and
ongoing patent lawsuits.
The Commission declined to immediately comment. EU antitrust
breaches can cost companies fines of as much as 10% of their global
turnover.
(Reporting by Foo Yun Chee; Editing by Kirsten Donovan)
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