Commentary: Indian Copycat Drugs Cheer New US Law
CALCUTTA, India, Nov. 5 (UPI) -- Even as pharmaceuticals giants such as Pfizer
or Merck fight raging legal battles against India's upstart drug-makers for
swamping their markets with cheap copycat drugs, a new law formulated by the
United States Food and Drug Administration is threatening to make it easier
for Indian drugs to enter the U.S. market.
According to the Indian drug industry, in the FDA's new method of drug approval
called 505(b)(2), the Indian generic drug manufacturers have found an easier
and faster route to enter the United States.
Dr. Reddy's Laboratories Ltd. has already benefited from the FDA's rule 505(b)(2),
getting the FDA's approval mid-October for AmVaz (Amlodipine Maleate), a slightly
different version of Pfizer's second largest selling drug, Norvasc. This antihypertension
drug was a major winner for Pfizer, which garnered $3.8 billion in sales last
year.
Faced with a mounting health bill the United States government has been encouraging
the entry of generic drugs. And to speed up approvals for generic firms filing
for approvals in the U.S. markets, the FDA has formulated a controversial hybrid
statutory approval mechanism known as a 505(b)(2) new drug application, which
drug makers can use if a generic drug they are trying to sell is not a virtual
duplicate of an original patented drug.
For most generic drug makers within and outside the United States, 505(b)(2)
is the most preferred route for seeking approval because it allows the chemistry
of the copycat drug to differ slightly while keeping the main ingredients the
same, and it also doesn't mandate a proof of safety and effectiveness.
Meanwhile Indian drug-makers' invasion in the U.S. markets is emerging as a
tough pill to swallow for large drug multinationals, who thrive on original
and patented but high-priced drugs. In fact the Indian drug industry has a standing
joke that if honchos of global drug makers draw up a list of people they like
the least, it would probably be overwhelmed with the names of Indian pharmaceutical
CEOs.
That's because when Indian drug makers like Dr. Reddy's, Ranbaxy, Cipla and
the like decide to crack the global markets they do not simply wait for the
patent to expire, as many generic drug makers do. Instead, they turn to lawyers
and ask them to exploit a loophole in an existing patent, and consequently,
file legal challenges on a range of drugs that seemingly have years of exclusive
sales left.
The approval bagged by Dr. Reddy's is a good example of the success that copycat
drug makes have achieved and the threats they are posing to the lucrative profits
of brand name medicines.
India showed two years ago it could take on the giants on their home turf when
Dr. Reddy's won the right to hawk generic versions of Eli Lilly's best-selling
antidepressant, Prozac in the U.S. markets. Since then, Indian drug makers have
become more aggressive.
With their new strategy, Indian generic drug makers do not even challenge a
patent directly, rather they argue that their product doesn't infringe on patent
protection because it is made of different ingredients, even though it has the
same effect as a branded drug.
Indian pharmaceutical companies are also leaving other countries behind in
the race to grab a share of the huge U.S. market. In the first six months of
the current calendar year, Indian companies filed 58 Drug Master Files (DMFs)
-- nearly double the number of DMF filings in the corresponding period last
year and more than the combined filings from the next five countries. This is
in sharp contrast to the situation a few years back. In 2000, Indian companies
had 40 DMF filings, second to 44 by Italian companies.
DMFs are submissions to the FDA providing information about facilities, process,
or ingredients used. Although not mandatory, most manufacturers file DMFs as
the information contained may be used to support an Investigational New Drug
Application (IND), a New Drug Application (NDA), an Abbreviated New Drug Application
(ANDA), or an export application.
This increasing capability of Indian companies to access the U.S. market is
also evident in clearances they have managed while keeping the traditional generic
drug makers out. During the past two decades generic drug makers with U.S. operations
have typically sought permission from the USFDA to market knockoffs of a branded
drug after all patents had expired. In all, Indian companies have received either
judicial or administrative permissions to sell 87 generic drugs in the U.S.
over the last two years and 68 more are awaiting approval. "It's a great
time for the Indian pharmaceutical industry," exults G.V. Prasad, CEO of
Dr. Reddy's.
One reason Indian companies are doing so well in America is that they have
learned to exploit U.S. patent laws that two decades ago were amended to allow
for the sale of copycat pharmaceutical products. Beginning in the early 1970s,
the U.S. government encouraged manufacturers to make duplicates of big drugs
and sell them cheaply in the country. In the mid-1990s, Indian companies searching
for overseas revenue streams began pushing into the U.S., where chronically
high prices for prescription drugs created a ready market for generics. Dr.
Reddy's, for example, was one of the hundred companies in the United States
that over the years knocked off everything from the antibiotic Augmentin to
the ulcer medicine Zantac. The company now generates one-third of its sales
in the U.S.
However, under pressure from global drug makers, the federal government is
reportedly planning to begin upholding international drug patents in 2005, forcing
Dr. Reddy's and Ranbaxy to find new ways of making money. Still, Indian drug
makers may be undaunted and are even willing to fight aggressive litigation.
"We want to get into the market early," says G.V. Prasad of Dr. Reddy's.
If a generic company simply waits for a patent to expire and various copies
hit shelves, competition gets tough and margins slender, "So, litigation
is the necessary cost of doing business," says Prasad.
Wednesday, 05-Nov-2003 8:50AM PST Story from United Press International
Copyright 2003 by United Press International (via ClariNet)