Program On Regulation, Therapeutics, And Law, Division of Pharmacoepidemiology and Pharmacoeconomics, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America.
Department of Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America.
PLoS Med. 2023 Nov 16;20(11):e1004309. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1004309. eCollection 2023 Nov.
Insulin is the primary treatment for type 1 and some type 2 diabetes but remains costly in the United States, even though it was discovered more than a century ago. High prices can lead to nonadherence and are often sustained by patents and regulatory exclusivities that limit competition on brand-name products. We sought to examine how manufacturers have used patents and regulatory exclusivities on insulin products approved from 1986 to 2019 to extend periods of market exclusivity.
We used the publicly available Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Approved Drug Products with Therapeutic Equivalence Evaluations (Orange Book) to identify all approved biosynthetic insulin products. Individual products approved under the same New Drug Application (NDA)-e.g., a vial and pen-were considered as separate products for the purposes of analysis. We recorded all patents and regulatory exclusivities listed in the Orange Book on each product and used Google Patents to extract the timing of patent application and whether patents were obtained on delivery devices or others aspects of the product. The primary outcome was the duration of expected protection, which was determined by subtracting the FDA approval date for each product from its last-to-expire patent or regulatory exclusivity (whichever occurred later). We performed a secondary analysis that considered overall protection on insulin lines-defined as groups of products approved under the same NDA with the same active ingredients manufactured by the same company. We also examined competition from follow-on insulin products-defined as products approved with the same active ingredients as originators but manufactured by different companies (approved via a specific drug approval pathway under section 505(b)(2) of the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act). During the study period, the FDA approved 56 individual products across 25 different insulin lines and 5 follow-ons across 3 different insulin lines. Thirty-three (59%) of the 56 products were drug-device combinations. Manufacturers of 9 products approved during the study period obtained patents filed after FDA approval that extended their duration of expected protection (by a median of 6 years). Approximately 63% of all patents on drug-device combinations approved during the study period were related to delivery devices. The median duration of expected protection on insulin products was 16.0 years, and the median protection on insulin lines was 17.6 years. An important limitation of our analysis is that manufacturers may continue to add patents on existing insulin products while competitors may challenge patents; therefore, periods of protection may change over time.
Among several strategies that insulin manufacturers have employed to extend periods of market exclusivity on brand-name insulin products are filing patents after FDA approval and obtaining a large number of patents on delivery devices. Policy reforms are needed to promote timely competition in the pharmaceutical market and ensure that patients have access to low-cost drugs.
胰岛素是 1 型和部分 2 型糖尿病的主要治疗方法,但在美国仍然价格昂贵,尽管它在一个多世纪前就已被发现。高价可能导致不遵医嘱,而且通常是由专利和监管专有权维持的,这些专有权限制了品牌产品的竞争。我们试图研究胰岛素产品制造商如何利用自 1986 年至 2019 年批准的胰岛素产品的专利和监管专有权来延长市场独占期。
我们使用可公开获取的食品和药物管理局(FDA)批准的治疗等效性评估(橙皮书)来确定所有批准的生物合成胰岛素产品。同一新药申请(NDA)下批准的单个产品-例如,小瓶和笔-在分析中被视为单独的产品。我们记录了橙皮书中列出的每个产品的所有专利和监管专有权,并使用谷歌专利提取专利申请的时间以及专利是否获得在输送装置或产品的其他方面。主要结果是预期保护期,通过从每个产品的 FDA 批准日期中减去其最后一项专利或监管专有权(以较晚者为准)来确定。我们进行了二次分析,考虑了胰岛素产品的整体保护期-定义为同一 NDA 下批准的具有相同活性成分且由同一家公司制造的一组产品。我们还研究了后续胰岛素产品的竞争-定义为具有与原始产品相同的活性成分但由不同公司制造的产品(通过《食品、药品和化妆品法》第 505(b)(2)条规定的特定药物批准途径获得批准)。在研究期间,FDA 批准了 25 种不同胰岛素产品中的 56 种不同产品和 3 种不同胰岛素产品中的 5 种后续产品。在研究期间批准的 9 种产品的制造商获得了 FDA 批准后提交的专利,延长了其预期保护期(中位数为 6 年)。在研究期间批准的药物-器械组合中,约 63%的专利与输送装置有关。胰岛素产品的预期保护期中位数为 16.0 年,胰岛素产品线的保护期中位数为 17.6 年。我们分析的一个重要限制是,制造商可能会在竞争对手提出挑战专利的情况下,继续在现有胰岛素产品上增加专利;因此,保护期可能会随着时间的推移而改变。
胰岛素制造商为延长品牌胰岛素产品的市场独占期而采用的几种策略包括在 FDA 批准后提交专利,并获得大量输送装置专利。需要进行政策改革,以促进药品市场的及时竞争,并确保患者能够获得低成本药物。