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Cancer drug maker Novartis loses India patent battle

Landmark ruling could help the poor get access to affordable medicines

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Swadeshi Jagran Manch activists demonstrate against multinational pharmaceutical company Novartis in New Delhi, last year. Photo: AFP

India’s Supreme Court rejected on Monday a patent bid by Swiss drug giant Novartis in a landmark ruling that activists say will protect access to cheap generic drugs and save lives in developing nations.

Novartis fought a seven-year legal battle to gain patent protection for an updated version of its blockbuster cancer drug Glivec, arguing that the compound was a significant improvement because it is more easily absorbed by the body.

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But in a ruling that went to the heart of patent law in a country known as the “pharmacy to the world”, the top court said the compound “did not satisfy the test of novelty or inventiveness” required by Indian legislation.

The court dismissed the Novartis’ case “with legal cost”, which means the firm must pay undisclosed legal expenses.

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India’s law restricts pharmaceutical companies from seeking fresh patents for making only small modifications – an industry practice known as “evergreening” – and the ruling enables generic drugmakers to continue copying Glivec.

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