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DRUG PATENTS, TECHNICAL NOTE Pharmaceutical patents and the TRIPS Agreement The purpose of this note is to describe those provisions of the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS Agreement) that relate to the standards of patent protection to be accorded to inventions in the area of pharmaceuticals. |
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21 September 2006 See also: > TRIPS issues: Pharmaceuticals and patents > Fact sheet: TRIPS and pharmaceutical patents (includes extracts of the TRIPS Agreement) |
To set this discussion in context, it is useful to recall three basic features of the TRIPS Agreement:
The main rule relating to patentability is that patents shall be available for any invention, whether a product or process, in all fields of technology without discrimination, where those inventions meet the standard substantive criteria for patentability namely, novelty, inventive step and industrial applicability. In addition, Members are required to make grant of a patent dependent on adequate disclosure of the invention and may require information on the best mode for carrying it out. Disclosure is a key part of the social contract that the grant of a patent constitutes since it makes publicly available important technical information which may be of use to others in advancing technology in the area, even during the patent term, and ensures that, after the expiry of the patent term, the invention truly falls into the public domain because others have the necessary information to carry it out. Three types of exclusion to the above rule on patentable subject-matter are allowed. These may be of interest from a public health perspective:
The minimum rights that must be conferred by a patent under the TRIPS Agreement follow closely those that were to be found in most patents laws, namely the right of the patent owner to prevent unauthorized persons from using the patented process and making, using, offering for sale, or importing the patented product or a product obtained directly by the patented process.
Under the TRIPS Agreement, the available term of protection must expire no earlier than 20 years from the date of filing the patent application. It should be noted that, although the issue of patent term extension to compensate for regulatory delays in the marketing of new pharmaceutical products was raised in the Uruguay Round negotiations, the TRIPS Agreement does not contain an obligation to introduce such a system.(1)
Under the TRIPS Agreement, patent rights are not absolute but can be subject to limitations or exceptions. These can be put into four categories:
Governments have a range of public policy measures outside the field of intellectual property to address issues of access to and prices of drugs. For example, many countries use price or reimbursement controls. Article 8 of the TRIPS Agreement makes it clear that WTO Members may, in formulating or amending their rules and regulations, adopt measures necessary to protect public health and nutrition, provided that such measures are consistent with the provisions of the Agreement.
The TRIPS Agreement lays down some transition provisions which gave WTO Members periods of time in order to adapt their legislation and practices to their TRIPS obligations. Those periods differ according to the type of obligation in question and the stage of development of the country concerned. With respect to those transition provisions which relate to the application of the obligations on substantive standards for the protection of pharmaceutical inventions, the obligations are mainly divided into two categories of countries:
In both cases, the rules of the TRIPS Agreement apply or will apply not only to new patent applications but also to patents still under protection at the end of the respective transition periods. Notwithstanding proposals to the contrary, the TRIPS Agreement did not require the bringing under protection of pharmaceutical inventions that were in the “pipeline” in these countries at the time of entry into force of the WTO.(3) However, with effect from that date (1 January 1995), those developing and least-developed countries that did not already make available patent protection for pharmaceutical products, have been under an obligation to provide a system whereby applications for patents for pharmaceutical product inventions can be filed (often referred to as a “mailbox” system). These applications did not have to be examined until after 1 January 2005 in the case of developing countries, and they do not have to be examined before 1 January 2016 in the case of least developed countries. If found to be patentable by reference to their filing (or priority) date, a patent would have to be granted for the remainder of the patent term counted from the date of filing. In the event that a pharmaceutical product that was the subject of a “mailbox” application obtained marketing approval prior to the decision on the grant of a patent, an exclusive marketing right of up to five years had to be granted provided that certain conditions were met. The General Council has waived this obligation for least developed country Members until 1 January 2016 (Decision of 8 July 2002).
Most developing and least developed countries already granted patent protection for pharmaceutical products prior to the entry into force of the TRIPS Agreement. In these countries, the TRIPS Agreement therefore did not lead to fundamental changes in this regard, although a certain amount of adjustment in legislation, for example in respect of patent term and compulsory licencing, was often necessary. With respect to the countries that did not provide patent protection for pharmaceutical products at the time of entry into force of the WTO Agreement, some, including Brazil and Argentina, decided to bring such protection into effect more quickly than is required under the TRIPS Agreement. The TRIPS Agreement pays considerable attention to the need to find an appropriate balance between the interests of rights holders and users. This was an important theme in its negotiation. This is not only reflected in the basic underlying balance related to disclosure and providing an incentive for R&D, but also in the limitations and exceptions to rights that are permitted and in the transition provisions. The flexibilities in the TRIPS Agreement have subsequently been clarified and reinforced by the Doha Declaration on the TRIPS Agreement and Public Health, as well as by the Waiver Decision of August 2003 and the Amendment Decision of December 2005 to facilitate compulsory licenses for export to needful countries. It should also be appreciated that the protection of pharmaceutical inventions was one aspect of a much wider agreement, covering not only the protection of intellectual property in general in a coherent and non-discriminatory way but also further liberalization and strengthening of the multilateral trading system as a whole. While it is true that some countries put particular emphasis on TRIPS matters in the Uruguay Round negotiations, it is also true that other countries attached great importance to other areas, for example textiles and agriculture. It is a belief shared by all WTO Members that a strong and vibrant multilateral trading system is essential for creating conditions for economic growth and development worldwide. This in turn provides for the generation of the resources required to tackle health problems. |
Footnotes: (1) The effective period of patent protection for inventions of new chemical entities is much less than the full 20 years, because a large part of that period will have expired before marketing approval is obtained from the public health regulatory bodies. For this reason, most of the major developed countries have introduced systems whereby a prolonged period of protection can be obtained to compensate, at least in part, for this loss of the effective period of protection. (2) Thirteen WTO Members (Argentina, Brazil, Cuba, Egypt, India, Kuwait, Morocco, Pakistan, Paraguay, Tunisia, Turkey, United Arab Emirates and Uruguay) have notified mailbox systems to the TRIPS Council, thus indicating that they did not grant patent protection to pharmaceutical products. Some of them, such as Argentina, Brazil and Turkey, have since introduced such protection. (It cannot be excluded that there were a few other WTO Members who should have notified but did not done so). (3) The pipeline refers to the backlog of inventions of new pharmaceutical products that were no longer patentable on that date, because disclosed, but not yet on the market because pending marketing approval. |
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