On Feb 14,
2019, Court of Justice of European Union (CJEU) handed down answers to the
question related to carve-out or skinny labeling in case of protected
indication.
Background:
Warner-Lambert Company (WLC) / Pfizer market the medicinal product Lyrica, whose active ingredient is pregabalin. That medicinal product is
intended for the treatment of epilepsy, generalised anxiety disorder and
neuropathic pain. WLC was the holder of European
Patent EP 0934061 B3, which covered the used of pregabalin for the
treatment of, inter alia, neuropathic pain. That patent expired on 17 July 2017.
In the Netherlands, the College ter Beoordeling van Geneesmiddelen (Medicinal
Product Evaluation Board, ‘the CBG’)
is the autonomous administrative body responsible for monitoring and assessing
the efficacy, risks and quality of medicinal products. The CBG publishes on its
website, inter alia, the terms of the marketing authorisation, the package
leaflet and the summary of product characteristics for each medicinal product. During
2015, several producers of generic medicinal products obtained marketing
authorisation for pregabalin from the CBG under the decentralised procedure.
One of those producers, Aurobindo, informed the CBG, before placing its
medicinal product on the market that it intended not to include the package
leaflet and the summary of product characteristics in the information relating
to the treatment of neuropathic pain. That company asked if it could
publish only part of the package leaflet and of the summary of product
characteristics, but the CBG refused. WLC brought an action before the
rechtbank Den Haag (District Court, The Hague, Netherlands) seeking, in
essence, an order that CBG abandon its practice of publishing in full on its
website package leaflets and summaries of product characteristics of generic
medicinal products and instead publish the edited version of those documents. By
judgment of 15 January 2016, the Hague district court upheld WLC’s action
concerning pregabalin. On 11 February 2017, the Netherlands State filed an
appeal against that judgment with the referring court. WLC also lodged a
cross-appeal with that court. Court of appeal then referred the following
questions to the CJEU.
1. Must Article 11 of Directive 2001/83 (1) or
any other provision of European Union law be interpreted as meaning that a
communication whereby the marketing authorisation applicant or holder for a
generic medicine, within the meaning of Article 10 of Directive 2001/83,
notifies the authority that he is not including in the Summary of Product
Characteristics and the package leaflet those parts of the Summary of Product
Characteristics for the reference medicine which refer to indications or dosage
forms covered by the patent right of a third party, should be considered as
a request to limit the marketing authorisation which must result in the
marketing authorisation not applying, or no longer applying, to the patented
indications or dosage forms?
2. If the
answer to question 1 is in the negative, do Articles 11 and 21(3) of Directive
2001/83 or any other provisions of EU law preclude the competent authority from
making public, by means of an authorisation granted under Article 6 in
conjunction with Article 10 of Directive 2001/83, the Summary of Product
Characteristics and the package leaflet, including those parts which refer to
indications or dosage forms which fall under the patent rights of a third
party, in a situation where the marketing authorisation applicant or holder has
notified the authority that he is not including in the Summary of Product
Characteristics and the package leaflet those parts of the Summary of Product
Characteristics for the reference medicine which refer to indications or dosage
forms covered by the patent right of a third party?
3. Does it
make any difference to the answer to question 2 that the competent authority
requires the authorisation holder to include in the package leaflet which the
authorisation holder must insert in the packaging of the medicine a reference
to the authority’s website on which the Summary of Product Characteristics is
published, including the parts which refer to indications or dosage forms
covered by the patent rights of a third party, whereas those parts, pursuant to
Article 11 of Directive 2001/83, are not included in the package leaflet?
CJEU answered the 1st question as affirmative. CJEU said
that as an exception to that principle that the marketing authorisation of a
generic medicinal product and that of a reference product must tally, the
second paragraph of Article 11 of Directive 2001/83 provides, as regards
applications for marketing authorisation of generic medicinal products, that ‘those
parts of the summary of product characteristics of the reference medicinal
product referring to indications or dosage forms which were still covered by
patent law at the time when a generic medicine was marketed need not be
included’. The rationale behind this exception is not to delay entry on the
market of generic medicinal products until expiry of all patents which may
include several indications or dosage forms of the reference medicinal product,
without any relaxation of the requirements of safety and efficacy which must be
met by generic medicinal products (see,
to that effect, judgment of 23 October 2014, Olainfarm, C‑104/13,
EU:C:2014:2316, paragraphs 27 and 28).
It is clear from a combined reading of Article 8(3)(j) and
the second paragraph of Article 11 of Directive 2001/83 that failure to include
in the summary of product characteristics of a generic medicinal product
certain indications or dosage forms of the marketing authorisation for the
reference medicinal product means that those indications or dosage forms are
not covered by the marketing authorisation application. By making use of the
option given by the second paragraph of Article 11, the marketing authorisation
applicant thus limits the scope of his application and the competent national
authority does not have any discretion in that respect, as the Advocate
General stated in point 57 of her Opinion.
CJEU also held that having regard to the positive answer
given to the first question, there is no need to answer the second & third
questions.
No comments:
Post a Comment