Indian patent office rejects Pfizer Tofacitinib application

Published: 1-Oct-2015

Companies including Pfizer, Bayer and Roche have in recent years struggled to retain exclusivity on drugs in India


The Indian Patent Office has rejected a patent application by Pfizer for its rheumatoid arthritis drug Tofacitinib as the US firm failed to substantiate its claim by establishing the enhanced efficiency of the compound over its base version.

'After having considered the submissions submitted by the applicant (Pfizer) in the hearing, the written submission and amended claims filed as well as in view of the discussions and findings by me, it is hereby ordered that the invention disclosed and claimed in the instant application is not considered as an invention under the provisions of the Act,'' said Bharat N S, assistant controller of patents and designs, Mumbai.

Quoting an apex court judgment, the assistant controller said that the applicant will have to establish the therapeutic enhanced efficacy of the claimed compound over the base compound.

This is the second time a multinational drug maker, seeking to enforce its intellectual property rights in the country, has failed to make it. In November 2012, the Intellectual Property Appellate Board revoked the patent on Roche's drug Pegasys (pegylated interferon alfa-2a), a biologics preparation used to treat Hepatitis C, seven years after it was granted by the Indian Patent Office in 2005.

According to Pfizer, the company has sought a patent that covers an important chemical formulation of the active compound in the medicine. The Patent Office, however, said the company would have to establish that the compound for which it is seeking a patent is therapeutically more effective than the active compound originally used in the medicine.

Companies including Pfizer, Bayer and Roche have in recent years struggled to retain exclusivity on drugs in India, alleging that patent laws are designed to favour local industry. India, however, claims its patents policy is designed to ensure affordability of medicines in the country, where less than 15% of the population has health insurance.

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