ECORYS.
J Health Polit Policy Law. 2009 Dec;34(6):979-1010. doi: 10.1215/03616878-2009-033.
After lengthening the duration of patents to twenty years in 1984, the pharmaceutical industry has turned to data exclusivity as a major vehicle for extending market protection, even after patents expire. Such protections give companies the power to tax consumers for innovation by charging above-market prices. This article draws upon unique information to describe how key actors lengthened data exclusivity for patented drugs to postpone generic competition in the European Union (EU) just before ten new members joined it. We explore the political route and the interests of different actors to understand the process by which industrial interests are translated into legal realities in the world's largest harmonized market. Several factors influenced the outcome, including the role of the pharmaceutical unit of the Directorate General for Enterprise of the European Commission in promoting the interests of the innovative branch of the industry, the time pressure to find a viable compromise before EU enlargement, and the heterogeneous preferences of the other actors. The case illustrates the inherent tension between the desire of both health care administrators and patients for high-quality, low-cost medicines and the objective of the innovator pharmaceutical industry to find and approve new drugs that are price protected and sell them in a way that maximizes revenues.
1984 年将专利期限延长至 20 年后,制药行业将数据专有权作为延长市场保护的主要手段,即使专利已经过期。这种保护使公司有权通过收取高于市场价格的费用来为创新向消费者征税。本文利用独特的信息描述了关键参与者如何在欧盟(EU)即将迎来十个新成员国之际,延长专利药品的数据专有权,以推迟仿制药的竞争。我们探讨了政治途径和不同利益相关者的利益,以了解工业利益如何在世界上最大的协调市场中转化为法律现实。几个因素影响了结果,包括欧盟企业总司制药部门在促进行业创新部门利益方面的作用、在欧盟扩大之前找到可行妥协方案的时间压力,以及其他利益相关者的异质偏好。该案例说明了医疗保健管理者和患者对高质量、低成本药物的渴望与创新型制药行业寻找和批准受价格保护的新药并以最大化收入的方式销售这些药物的目标之间的固有紧张关系。