Fixed-Dose Combinations for HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria - Report of a Meeting Held 16-18 December 2003 Geneva
(2003; 199 pages) View the PDF document
Table of Contents
Open this folder and view contentsSummary: Observations and some ways forward
Open this folder and view contentsWelcome
Open this folder and view contentsFixed-dose combinations for tuberculosis: lessons learned from a clinical, formulation and regulatory perspective
Open this folder and view contentsProduct costs of fixed-dose combination tablets in comparison with separate dispensing and or co-blistering of antituberculosis drugs
Open this folder and view contentsFixed-dose combinations: artemisinin-based combination therapies for malaria treatment
Open this folder and view contentsDeveloping combinations of drugs for malaria examination of critical issues and lessons learnt
Open this folder and view contentsSafety and long-term effectiveness of generic fixed-dose formulations of nevirapine-based HAART amongst antiretroviral-naïve HIV-infected patients in India
Open this folder and view contentsEffect of introduction of fixed-dose combinations on the drug supply chain: experiences from the field
Open this folder and view contentsEffect of fixed-dose combination (FDC) medications on adherence and treatment outcomes
Open this folder and view contentsEffect of fixed-dose combination (FDC) drugs on development of clinical antimicrobial resistance: a review paper
Close this folderFixed-dose combination (FDC) drugs availability and use as a global public health necessity: intellectual property and other legal issues
View the documentExecutive summary
View the documentIntroduction
View the documentIPRs and Fixed-dose Combinations: Introduction to the “Anticommons Problem”
View the documentIPRs and Fixed-dose Combinations: The “Anticommons Problem” (II)
View the documentOvercoming IP/Legal barriers
View the documentBack to the Future: TRIPS, Public Health, Access to Medicines
View the documentRecommendations
View the documentConclusions
View the documentReferences
Open this folder and view contentsPharmaceutical development and quality assurance of FDCs
View the documentAnnotated agenda
View the documentList of participants
 

Executive summary

Patented medicines are priced far above marginal cost and patent holders are rewarded for research and development (R&D) with grants of exclusive commercial rights (primarily patents, copyrights and trademarks) so that intellectual property laws allow the “investor” to regain some of the benefits of their research and innovation. Fixed-dose combination drugs have the potential to involve multiple patents held by different parties. The transaction costs associated with bargaining over property rights for components of the FDC can arguably lead to both blocking of commercial development and, if already manufactured, to lack of access “on the ground”.

There are various ways to overcome or ameliorate the negative effects of IPRs on access to FDCs. Some unilateral mechanisms include:

• Put the ‘invention’ (e.g., fixed-dosage combinations) into the public domain and avoid IP/patent rights entirely or try to “design around” existing IP for FDCs.

• Make patents harder to get so that only real advances in medicines will be patented.

• Create exceptions to patent infringement so that various entities are spared the transaction costs of licensing or, more particularly, patent litigation.

• Use voluntary and, if needed, compulsory licensing between patent owners.


Other mechanisms include the creation of multilateral, collective business models for R&D and transacting IPRs. These might include the creation of voluntary or government-mandated patent pools. Another possibility, not yet well thought-out, would be to develop various IP information and transactional “clearinghouses” specifically for IP related to fixed-dose combination drugs. Such a clearinghouse should be able to identify all relevant IPRs over a given (i.e., FDC) technology and, indicate which are and which are not available to be negotiated, and if they are, how they can be accessed. It should create a pricing scheme and terms of contract and a royalty disbursement accounting system.

Multiple components of FDCs can lead to complex issues of IPR access and implicates other factors such as R&D funding mechanisms and global IP rules. Creative approaches to the problem are required. For developing countries, IP-resource poor inventors, NGOs, and patients, ways are needed to reduce IPR transaction costs with regard to fixed-dose combination drugs.

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Last updated: May 3, 2013