| Literature DB >> 29733729 |
Ameet Sarpatwari1, Reed F Beall2, Abdurrahman Abdurrob3, Mengdong He4, Aaron S Kesselheim5.
Abstract
For thirty-five years the Orphan Drug Act of 1983 has provided incentives for pharmaceutical manufacturers to develop drugs to treat rare diseases-conditions that affect fewer than 200,000 people in the US. One key statutory incentive is an exclusive seven-year marketing right for the rare disease indication, which has been heralded as driving a dramatic increase in the number of rare disease treatments. However, most new drugs are also protected by patents. In this study we assessed all new small-molecule drugs approved in the period 1985-2014 that had at least one indication for an orphan-designated disease as of January 1, 2017. We found that orphan drug exclusivity outlasted the last expiring patent in 33 percent of cases overall, and in a smaller percentage of cases for each successive ten-year drug cohort: from 50 percent for drugs approved in 1985-94 to 35 percent for those approved in 1995-2004 and 18 percent for those approved in 2005-14. The Orphan Drug Act's market exclusivity incentive has played an increasingly smaller role in protecting rare disease drugs from competition, while rare disease drugs have substantially increased as a fraction of all new drug approvals.Entities:
Keywords: Pharmaceuticals
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29733729 DOI: 10.1377/hlthaff.2017.1179
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Aff (Millwood) ISSN: 0278-2715 Impact factor: 6.301