| Literature DB >> 31775767 |
Deborah Gleeson1, Joel Lexchin2, Ronald Labonté3, Belinda Townsend4, Marc-André Gagnon5, Jillian Kohler6, Lisa Forman7, Kenneth C Shadlen8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Trade and investment agreements negotiated after the World Trade Organization's Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) have included increasingly elevated protection of intellectual property rights along with an expanding array of rules impacting many aspects of pharmaceutical policy. Despite the large body of literature on intellectual property and access to affordable medicines, the ways in which other provisions in trade agreements can affect pharmaceutical policy and, in turn, access to medicines have been little studied. There is a need for an analytical framework covering the full range of provisions, pathways, and potential impacts, on which to base future health and human rights impact assessment and research. A framework exploring the ways in which trade and investment agreements may affect pharmaceutical policy was developed, based on an analysis of four recently negotiated regional trade agreements. First a set of core pharmaceutical policy objectives based on international consensus was identified. A systematic comparative analysis of the publicly available legal texts of the four agreements was undertaken, and the potential impacts of the provisions in these agreements on the core pharmaceutical policy objectives were traced through an analysis of possible pathways.Entities:
Keywords: Access to medicines; CPTPP; Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement; Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement on Trans-Pacific Partnership; Pharmaceutical policy; Pharmaceuticals; TPP-11; TRIPS; Trade agreements; Trans-Pacific Partnership; United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31775767 PMCID: PMC6882307 DOI: 10.1186/s12992-019-0518-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Global Health ISSN: 1744-8603 Impact factor: 4.185
Summary of analytic framework linking provisions, pathways, and potential impacts
| Provisions | Pathways | Potential impacts on core pharmaceutical policy objectives |
|---|---|---|
| TRIPS-Plus intellectual property protection | • Extended periods of exclusivity for patented medicines and obstacles to market entry for generic and biosimilar medicines can reduce competition and lead governments and consumers to pay monopoly prices for longer periods of time | • Access to affordable medicines may be reduced |
| Investment protection: investor-state dispute settlement mechanism; investment chapter with IP covered in definition of investment | • Disputes, or the threat of a dispute, may cause reversal of pharmaceutical policy decisions or regulatory chill—possibly resulting in extended exclusivity periods, relaxation of regulatory standards or inability to support local producers | • Access to affordable medicines may be reduced • Rational use of medicines may be compromised • Local production and health security may be compromised |
| Procedural requirements for national pharmaceutical pricing and reimbursement programs | • Industry objectives and values may be given priority over public health and access to medicines • Pharmaceutical companies may be given additional opportunities to provide input to, or to contest, decision-making regarding pricing and/or reimbursement • Flexibility regarding prioritization and timing of listing drugs for reimbursement may decrease • Scarce health resources may be diverted towards implementing procedural requirements with no public benefit • Pharmaceutical policy-making may come under pressure from trade partners with large pharmaceutical industries • Excessive prices may not reflect clinical value of medicines | • Access to affordable medicines may be reduced • Rational use of medicines may be compromised |
| Provisions with implications for regulation of pharmaceutical marketing | • Attempts to prohibit or restrict pharmaceutical promotion to health professionals (to encourage better prescribing) or consumers (to encourage better use of medicines) may be reversed or chilled • Restrictions on pharmaceutical marketing may be difficult to enforce (for cross-border advertising services) | • Rational use of medicines may be compromised |
| Regulatory requirements for assessing safety, efficacy and quality | • Standards may be lowered through harmonization to the lowest common denominator, pressure from trade partners to adopt lower standards or greater involvement of the pharmaceutical industry in standard-setting • Pressure to speed up regulatory approval processes may result in increase in safety risks • Constraints on public information about pharmaceutical inspections may compromise safety and quality • Cooperation on pharmaceutical inspection issues may improve the quality of medicines thereby improving consumer safety | • Safety, efficacy and quality of medicines may be compromised • Manufacturing quality of medicines may be lowered or improved |
| Reduction/elimination of tariffs on pharmaceuticals or their ingredients | • Prices of imported pharmaceuticals may fall, in some circumstances (if additional mark-ups are not applied at other points in the supply chain) • Viability of local generic pharmaceutical industry in question if there is greater competition—potentially reducing supply and compromising health security | • Access to affordable medicines may increase • Local production and health security may be compromised |
| Rules applying to government procurement of pharmaceuticals | • Governments/hospitals may pay lower prices as a result of open tendering, depending on the nature of the procurement process and institutions • Viability of fledgling domestic pharmaceutical industries may be reduced if government and hospital purchasing cannot preference local suppliers | • Access to affordable medicines may increase • Local production and health security may be compromised |
| Rules applying to state-owned enterprises and designated monopolies | • Viability of domestic pharmaceutical industry in developing countries may be affected if state-owned pharmaceutical companies are required to operate as commercial entities and cannot be given financial support or preferential treatment, or cannot give preference to local suppliers • Pressure for reform of state owned enterprises may result in greater competition and lower prices | • Local production and health security may be compromised, or improved |
| Procedural requirements for customs administration and trade facilitation | • Movement of generic pharmaceuticals across borders may be impeded, or facilitated, in cases of suspected breaches of IP laws | • Access to affordable medicines may be reduced, or improved |
| Rules applying to regulatory practices, cooperation and coherence | • Pharmaceutical industry may have additional levers to provide input to, or contest pharmaceutical policy • Potential for industry representation on or input to expert advisory groups may compromise optimal pharmaceutical policy outcomes | • Access to affordable medicines may be reduced • Safety, efficacy and quality of medicines may be compromised • Rational use of medicines may be compromised • Local production and health security may be compromised |
Types of TRIPS-Plus IP provisions common in recent regional trade agreements
| Type of provision | Mechanism for prolonging exclusivity |
|---|---|
| Requirement to grant patents for new uses of known products, new methods of using known products, or new processes of using known products | Enables firms to obtain additional patent protection for new forms or uses of existing products, which may reduce the use of equivalent versions after the expiry of primary patents on original molecules. |
| Patent term adjustments to compensate for delays in granting patents and/or in marketing approval processes | Extends the length of patent terms. |
| Data protection for new pharmaceutical products including biologics (an alternative pathway for maintaining monopoly control based on the clinical trial data submitted to regulators in order to gain marketing approval) | Can add to the length of exclusivity if the period of data protection extends beyond the expiration of relevant patents. Can provide monopoly protection for drugs or biologics that are not protected by patents (e.g., where a drug or biologic is not eligible for a patent or where the key patent has been invalidated). Provides a time-limited but absolute monopoly which cannot be challenged in court (as in the case of a patent) and may prevent or delay marketing approval of generics produced under a compulsory or government use license. |
| Additional data protection for new indications/formulations/methods of administration or for combination products containing a chemical entity that has not previously been approved | |
| New and/or longer periods of data protection or market exclusivity for biologic products;a | |
| Patent linkage mechanisms (linking patent status with marketing approval of generics); | Can extend periods of exclusivity if marketing approval is denied due to patents of questionable validity, patents that are not being infringed by the generic product or patents for changes that have no direct therapeutic applications. |
| Trade secrets protection | Unlike a patent, trade secret protection does not provide a time-limited monopoly, so it can potentially exclude competition indefinitely.b |
| TRIPS-Plus provisions for the enforcement of intellectual property rights | Strict enforcement of, and penalties for, suspected violations of intellectual property rights, including seizure of suspected counterfeit goods at the border (i.e., goods suspected of violating IP rules rather than being of deliberately inferior quality), excessive damages, provisional measures, and criminal enforcement of patent infringement. |
aBiologic products are a new class of medicines which are derived from living cells using biotechnological processes and that need to be delivered by injection or intravenously. These include many expensive treatments for cancer and autoimmune diseases, and account for a growing share of the global pharmaceutical market and of pharmaceutical expenditure in many countries. [21]. IMS Institute for Healthcare Informatics. The Global Use of Medicines: Outlook through 2017. IMS Health, 2013
bProtection of trade secrets is likely to play an increasing role in excluding competition due to the growing dominance of biologics and the emergence of personalized medicine. The manufacturing processes for developing these newer treatments are very complex, and may make it essentially impossible to create a biosimilar that is identical to the reference product. [22]. Lyman GH, Zon R, Harvey RD, Schilsky RL. Rationale, opportunities, and reality of biosimilar medications. New England Journal of Medicine 2018;378:2036–2044