Guest guest Posted March 30, 2006 Report Share Posted March 30, 2006 INDIAN GROUPS FILE FIRST OPPOSITION AGAINST PATENT APPLICATION FOR AIDS DRUG. Patents in India Endanger Global Availability of Affordable Medicines Imphal, Thursday, March 30, 2006 - Today, the Indian Network of People Living with HIV/AIDS (INP+), the Manipur Network of Positive People (MNP+), represented by the Lawyers' Collective HIV/AIDS Unit officially submitted their opposition to a patent application filed in the Kolkata patent office by GlaxoKline (GSK) for Combivir, a fixed-dose combination of two essential AIDS drugs zidovudine/lamivudine. The opposition is based on technical and health grounds. " We are objecting to the patenting of Combivir because it is not a new invention but simply the combination of two existing drugs. More importantly, the granting of such a patent risks increasing the cost of anti-retroviral treatment for many people living with HIV/AIDS thereby further increasing the burden on developing countries already struggling to treat patients, " said K.K. Abraham, President of INP+. Combivir is a widely used fixed dose combination and is used extensively in projects run by international aid organization Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF). Almost all the Combivir used by MSF is generic. India, Burkina Faso, Mongolia, Central African Republic, Malawi, Peru, the Republic of Kyrgizstan, Cambodia, Ukraine and Swaziland are other countries also identified by the Global Fund as using generic Combivir. Patents create monopolies on drug manufacture and prevent the production of such affordable generic alternatives. The availability of affordable quality generic versions of Combivir and other anti-retroviral medicines has allowed developing country governments to put more people on treatment and thus extend their lives. In India alone there are 5.1 million people living with HIV/AIDS many of whom receive generic drugs under the national HIV/AIDS treatment program. " Decisions made by Indian patent offices are a question of life or death for people living with HIV/AIDS who rely on the availability of affordable AIDS drugs and other essential medicines made by Indian generic manufacturers, " explains Anand Grover, Director of Lawyers Collective HIV/AIDS Unit. Last year, India changed its patent law to comply with the World Trade Organization's TRIPS Agreement that governs trade agreements and intellectual property rights. Three weeks ago, India granted its first ever patent on a drug to a hepatitis C treatment produced by Roche. Public interest groups are deeply concerned this will set a precedent leading to the patenting of other essential medicines including anti-retrovirals. " Besides Combivir there are other patent applications of essential medicines waiting to be approved or rejected, including other anti-retrovirals and drugs for treating mental illness, tuberculosis and opportunisticstic infections, " said Tahir Amin, an intellectual property lawyer with the Bangalore based Alternative Law Forum. However, the new Indian Patent law allows oppositions to a patent application before it is granted. Indian cancer patients and generic drug manufacturers recently opposed a Novartis patent application for Gleevec, an anti-cancer drug, on the grounds that the application claimed a new form of an old drug. The patent was subsequently rejected by the patent office. Petitioners are now demanding that the Combivir patent application be rejected on similar grounds. THE FOLLOWING PEOPLE ARE AVAILABLE FOR INTERVIEW Loon Gangte - Indian Network of People Living with HIV/AIDS (INP+) Anand Grover and Priti Radhakrishnan - Lawyers' Collective HIV/AIDS Unit Tahir Amin - Alternative Law Forum Ratan Singh - Manipur Network of Positive People (MNP+) Leena Menghaney - Campaign for Access to Essential Medicines, MSF For information or interviews please contact Petrana Ford 0986888410/ 09811365412 Manoj Pardesi Global Advisor - We Care Coordinator - Asia Pacific PLWHA Resource Center (APPRC) J- 50 B.K. Dutt Colony Jorbagh Lane New Delhi-110003 Ph: +91 11 24652297 or 98 Fax: +91 11 24652296 E-mail: <manoj.pardesi@...> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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