Rahul PPT
Rahul PPT
Rahul PPT
Introduction:
NDA ANDA Generics
Orange Book
The Electronic Orange Book Query enables searching of the approved drug list by active ingredient, proprietary name, applicant holder or applicant number.
NDA vs. ANDA Review Process Brand Name Drug NDA Requirements 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Chemistry Manufacturing Controls Labeling Testing Animal Studies Clinical Studies Bioavailability Generic Drug ANDA Requirements 1. Chemistry 2. Manufacturing 3. Controls 4. Labeling 5. Testing 6. Bioequivalence
APPLICANT
ANDA
Application Review
Labeling Review
Bioequivalence Review
Chem/Micro OK?
Labeling OK?
Bioequivalence OK?
APPROVED ANDA
Orange Book
All FDA approved drug products listed (NDAs, OTCs & ANDAs)
Therapeutic equivalence codes
A = Substitutable B = Inequivalent, NOT Substitutable
Expiration dates: patent and exclusivity Reference Listed Drugs/brand drugs identified by FDA for generic companies to compare with their proposed products
Allowed generic firms to rely on findings of safety and efficacy of innovator drug after expiration of patents and exclusivities (do not have to repeat expensive clinical and pre-clinical trials) Allowed patent extensions and exclusivities to innovator firms
6
Intellectual property rights are the rights given to persons over the creations of their minds. They usually give the creator an exclusive right over the use of his/her creation for a certain period of time.
Intellectual Capital
Intellectual Assets Human Resources Intellectual Property
IP as a property
Can be sold Can be bought Can be lease or rent Can pass under a will Can be assigned
Overview of IP Management
IP Strategy Aligned with business strategy. Competitive advantage. Forward-looking. Measure/Monitor Value creation Accessibility Awareness IP Assets Patents Copyrights Trademarks, trade dress Designs Trade secretes Confidential info,know-how Investment Pursue R&D License-in Create alliance
Geographical indications
Layout of Designs of Integrated Circuits
Patents
An exclusive right granted by a government to an inventor to prevent others from making, selling or using a new product or a new process; therefore it is a negative right. Term of the patent in INDIA is 20 years from the date of filing of the application.
Legal: - Scope of the Claims - Ownership & Assignment Rights - Validity, Maintenance Status
Patents
Contract between the inventor, the assignee, and the state
Full disclosure in return for a time & geographically limited monopoly Terms are state specific but subject to international conventions
1-2 years
Drug Development
Pre Clinical Testing Initial Synthesis Animal Testing Clinical Trials Phase I Phase II Phase III 1 month 2-3 years 1-2 months
6 months
1-3 years
1-2 months
The companies with the most drugs (RLD NDAs) tend to be big pharma firms
Company Name Total RLD NDAs by Company Total Number of Patents Covering all of Companys RLD NDAs 98 67 35 46 62 46 50 52 36 24 Number (Percentage) of Those Patents that is Owned by Company 1 (1.0%) 19 (28.4%) 6 (17.1%) 23 (50.0%) 8 (12.9%) 4 (8.7%) 28 (56.0%) 41 (78.8%) 1 (2.8%) 21 (87.5%)
GlaxoSmithKline Novartis Bristol Myers Squibb Pfizer AstraZeneca Pharmacia and Upjohn Co. Abbott Laboratories Merck Aventis Eli Lilly
58 38 30 29 25 24 23 23 18 16
284
516
152 (29.5%)
Subsidiary companies and mergers play an important role in the pharmaceutical industry
Company Name Total RLD NDAs by Company Total Number of Patents Covering all of Companys RLD NDAs 122 103 71 67 38 63 51 50 52 28 Number (Percentage) of Those Patents that is Owned by Company 78 (63.9%) 75 (72.8%) 51 (71.8%) 35 (52.2%) 13 (34.2%) 38 (60.3%) 32 (62.7%) 32 (64.0%) 41 (78.8%) 18 (64.3%)
Pfizer GlaxoSmithKline Johnson and Johnson Novartis Bristol Myers Squibb AstraZeneca Sanofi-Aventis Abbott Laboratories Merck Roche
64 60 39 38 33 26 26 23 23 19
351
645
413 (64.0%)
Eli Lilly
Merck Roche Abbott Laboratories
13
12 12 11
16
23 19 23
81.3%
52.2% 63.2% 47.8%
Total by Top 10
199
326
61.0%
* Firms with the most drugs (RLD NDAs) where the drug maker owns all the patents protecting the drug
Roche
34
18 (52.9%)
588
451 (76.7%)
Copyright
Narrow Protection: expression not ideas
Inexpensive: free rights, low cost to register Quick: automatic
Copyright
Microsoft
WORD
Copyright. (kprt) the exclusive legal right to the publication, sale, etc. of a literary or artisitic work.
Trademarks
Variable Protection: depends on distinctiveness Moderate Cost: 1.5 - 3K per country Time Consuming: 1 - 2 years to obtain Lengthy: Indefinitely renewable
Trademark
Trademark. (trdmrk) a symbol, word, etc. used by a manufacturer or dealer to distinguish his product.
Microsoft
Trademarks
Words, Letters, Symbols, logo, combination of words and letters, Colors, Shapes, Slogans Corporate Name, Pictures , Collective marks Domain names Unlimited right. To be renewed every ten years Infringement of Trade Mark. Criminal + Civil Remedies Application Examination Publication Opposition Registration
Renewal
Rectification
Trade Secrets
Known by a limited number of persons, all of whom are under an obligation to maintain the confidentiality of the information Take measures to ensure that the information remains confidential Employee and Contractor agreements The information cannot be determined by examination or analysis of the final product (reverse engineering destroys a trade secret)
Trade Secrets
Trade Secerets. (trd skrit) A trade secret is any information that can be used in the operation of a business or other enterprise and that is sufficiently valuable and secret to afford an actual or potential economic advantage over others. A trade secret can consist of a formula, pattern, combination of data, computer program, device, method, technique, process, or other form or embodiment of economically value information.
Trade secrets
Confidentiality
Potentially indefinite Protection lost if independent discovery or reverse engineered
Designs
Shape, Aesthetic features, Configuration, Surface pattern of an Article. New and original. Does not cover mechanical working of the article. 15 years right. Piracy of Design--- Only Civil Remedies.
July 06
June 06 20 days
Aug 06
Nov 06
20-30 days Oct 06 6 12 months May / Nov 07
Scheduling Order
(13) Court Decision / Beginning of Appeals Process / Expiration of Statutory 30 Month Stay
12 18 months 3 - 4 months/ 8-12 months Nov 08 / May 10 Nov 09 / May 11
May 08/Dec 08
2 weeks
Jun 08 /Jan 09