The provision clarifies how much time pharmaceutical companies have to apply for patent extensions that can provide extra years of protection from generic competition.
But critics, who have labeled the provision “The Dog Ate My Homework Act,” say it is really a special fix for one drug manufacturer, the Medicines Company, and its powerful law firm, WilmerHale. The company and its law firm, with hundreds of millions of dollars in drug sales at stake, lobbied Congress heavily for several years to get the patent laws changed.
The patent office initially said that the company had missed the deadline for applying for a patent extension by a day or two, potentially losing nearly four years of patent protection on its main drug, the anticoagulant Angiomax. The provision would guarantee that the Medicines Company got the extra patent protection, and it would relieve WilmerHale, which was hired to file the application, of a possible malpractice payment to its client.
On Thursday, the Senate is scheduled to vote on an amendment proposed by Senator Jeff Sessions, Republican of Alabama, that would strip the provision from the bill. “The key question is whether we will vote to bail out a law firm that made a mistake and now wants consumers and taxpayers to pay the freight for that error,” Senator Sessions and Senator Tom Coburn, a Republican from Oklahoma, said in a letter sent Wednesday to colleagues. They said the extra patent protection on Angiomax could cost hospitals and consumers $1 billion.
But Mr. Sessions faces an uphill battle because Senate leaders want their colleagues to pass the House version of the bill, which contains that provision, without any amendments, saying any changes could jeopardize the entire legislation.
David E. Redlick, co-chairman of the life sciences practice at WilmerHale, said other companies, including Bayer and AstraZeneca, might also now benefit from patent extensions.
“The repeated assertion that this is a single company bill is just not so,” Mr. Redlick said. He said the existing law had unclear wording. The new provision “will resolve that uncertainty on a permanent basis, which one would hope would be a key purpose of patent reform.”
He also said that a federal judge ruled last year that the Medicines Company had filed its application on time. So the patent extension is expected to be granted, and WilmerHale would never have to make the malpractice payment, even without the legislation, he said. The legislation provides insurance in case the court ruling is reversed, he said.
Applications for patent extensions must be made within 60 days of a drug’s approval by the Food and Drug Administration.
The United States Patent and Trademark Office ruled that the Medicines Company, which filed its application in 2001, had missed the deadline by a day or two.
As a result, Angiomax could have been vulnerable to generic competition as early as September 2010, instead of June 2015. Sales of Angiomax accounted for virtually all of the Medicines Company’s $437.6 million in revenue last year.
The company, based in Parsippany, N.J., sued the Patent Office, arguing that since it had received F.D.A. approval for Angiomax after the customary close of business on a Friday, the 60-day clock should not have started ticking until the next Monday.
In August 2010, a federal judge agreed and the government did not appeal. The Patent Office, which granted interim patent extensions during the lawsuit, is working on the final extension.
But APP Pharmaceuticals, a drug company that wants to sell a generic version of Angiomax, is trying to have the judge’s decision overturned.
The amendment would change the patent law to agree with the judge’s interpretation of the deadline calculations.
The Medicines Company has been pressing for years for a legislative solution, spending more than $17 million since 2005 on prominent lobbyists, including former House majority leaders Richard Gephardt, a Democrat, and Dick Armey, a Republican.
The company has been assisted in its effort by WilmerHale, known formally as Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr.
Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=c80012459a8f3ea9e70d323885bf5f25