Johnson & Johnson says it won't enforce secondary patents on tuberculosis med Sirturo

2023-10-02
Johnson & Johnson says it won't enforce secondary patents on tuberculosis med Sirturo
Preview
来源: FiercePharma
The pledge comes after the company slashed prices on the med by 55%. Still, that approach excluded some countries, according to Unitaid.
After allowing generic competition and slashing the price of its multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) med Sirturo (bedaquiline) in low- and middle-income countries, Johnson & Johnson has taken its access efforts a step further by committing to not enforce secondary patents on the treatment in 134 countries.
Now, generic makers in low-and middle-income countries can sell their own versions of Sirturo if they are “of good quality, medically acceptable” and used only in the 134 countries, a company said in a release.
“This addresses any misperception that access to our medicine is limited or restricted and builds on our decade of investments in collaborative efforts to help countries sustainably scale up access and bring people living with MDR-TB into treatment,” J&J’s head of global public health and social impact, Howard Reid, said in a statement.
While the drug’s primary patent expired over the summer, some secondary patents don't expire 2027.
The move comes after several advocacy groups called on the pharma giant to increase access to the drug.
Last week, the global health initiative Unitaid pressed J&J to expand its efforts beyond price cuts. In an open letter to CEO Joaquin Duato, Unitaid’s executive director Dr. Philippe Duneton expressed the organization's “disappointment” that J&J “ignored the public health community’s calls” and continued to enforce its secondary patents in many countries with a high burden from MDR-TB.
The pricing agreement, which discounted Sirturo by 55%, left the med only accessible for purchase through the Global Drug Facility (GDF), Unitaid noted. This approach excluded several countries, the group said.
The drug serves as the "backbone” of the World Health Organization’s treatment guidelines for the disease, with three out of every four MDR-TB patients on treatment receiving a bedaquiline-containing regimen, according to J&J.
Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) called the latest pledge a “huge success” and a “sea change” in TB. Now, the group is turning attention to Otsuka’s TB drug delamanid and its secondary patents, it said in a recent statement.
更多内容,请访问原始网站
文中所述内容并不反映新药情报库及其所属公司任何意见及观点,如有版权侵扰或错误之处,请及时联系我们,我们会在24小时内配合处理。
靶点
-
立即开始免费试用!
智慧芽新药情报库是智慧芽专为生命科学人士构建的基于AI的创新药情报平台,助您全方位提升您的研发与决策效率。
立即开始数据试用!
智慧芽新药库数据也通过智慧芽数据服务平台,以API或者数据包形式对外开放,助您更加充分利用智慧芽新药情报信息。