Title: ‘IN CIPRO WE TRUST’:
BUT HOW DO WE FEEL ABOUT OUR DRUG PATENT LAWS? (2002 Third
Year Paper)
Author(s): Daniela Bassan
Subject & Subject keywords:
Food and Drug Law "drugs" "policy" "CIPRO" "anthrax"
Abstract: In many ways, the
terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, crystallized national
debate over drug patents—both in Canada and the
United States. This became clear when, at the height of the anthrax
attacks in October, NBC’s Tom Brokaw paid the
following homage to the top anti-anthrax drug:
“In Cipro we trust.†On the one
hand, the public was eternally grateful for the research and
development that led to the patented, life-saving CIPRO. On the
other, the Canadian and United States governments insisted on
obtaining national stockpiles of the drug at much-reduced prices.
In fact, these conflicting attitudes toward CIPRO revealed a
greater reality. Competing policy
objectives—providing incentives for
pharmaceutical innovation while ensuring timely access to
affordable medicines—are the raison
d’être of many drug patent regimes,
including those in Canada and the United States. Legislators and
regulators alike keep searching for the best balance between these
conflicting goals. This paper explores these issues through a
comparative study of Canadian and United States drug patent
regimes. Part II is an overview of the legislative and regulatory
framework currently in place in both jurisdictions. In at least one
significant respect, the regimes in Canada and the United States
are unique, vis-Ã -vis the rest of the world. Pursuant
to complex procedures, a drug patentee is entitled to an automatic
injunction against a proposed generic competitor. Parts III and IV
consider how these drug patent rules have played out in the case of
CIPRO—both before and after September 11, again
in Canada and the United States. The purpose of the CIPRO case
study is twofold: (1) to show how legal incentives provided to drug
manufacturers can be misused, leading to possible anticompetitive
outcomes; and (2) to demonstrate how current laws may not
adequately address the new, suddenly pressing objective of
bioterrorism defense. Finally, Part V looks at pending legislation
directed at readjusting the balance between pharmaceutical
innovation and generic competition.