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January
18, 2007
Mashelkar Committee submits its report
on patentability of NCE’s and micro-organisms
The
much awaited report of the Technical Expert Group on Patent Law
Issues, which was constituted under the chairmanship of Dr. R.A.
Mashelkar (Committee) has been submitted on December 28,2006.
Before the Patents
Act, 1970 (“Act”) was amended to introduce the product
patent regime, various aspects of the proposed amendments were
debated in Parliament and various other fora. The Committee was set up by the Ministry of
Health and Family Welfare in April, 2005 to make recommendations
on two highly debated issues:
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Whether restricting the grant of patents for pharmaceutical substances to a new chemical entity (“NCEs”) or to new medical entity (“NMEs”) involving one or more inventive steps would be TRIPS compatible;
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Whether excluding micro-organisms from patent protection would violate TRIPS.
The Committee submitted its
report after taking into consideration inputs from stake holders
such as industry associations, non-governmental organizations and
intellectual property attorneys and relevant legal positions in
China, U.S., Brazil, Europe, Japan, Australia and United Kingdom.
In making the recommendations, the Committee was guided by the
need for access of affordable medicines to the people of India,
encouraging innovation by Indian industry, its current
capabilities in R&D, and balancing of India’s obligations
under international agreements with wider public interest.
Recommendations
NCEs/NMEs:
The committee concluded that:
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Restricting grant of patent only to NCEs or NMEs and thereby excluding other categories of pharmaceutical inventions would run contrary to Article 27 of TRIPs, which mandates patent protection to all inventions.
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The option of resorting to articles 7 and 8 of the TRIPS Agreement or the Doha declaration on TRIPs Agreement and public health to circumvent Article 27 was also excluded.
Referring to the
Indian government’s concern over the phenomenon of
“ever-greening”, the Committee distinguished between
“ever-greening” and ”incremental innovations” as follows:
”Ever-greening” refers to an extension of a patent monopoly,
achieved by executing trivial and insignificant changes to an
already existing patented product while ”incremental
innovations” is defined to mean sequential developments that
build on the original patented product.
The Committee opined
that incremental inventions ought to be encouraged by the Indian
Patent regime as they may be of tremendous value to a country like
India, while every effort should be made to prevent grant of
frivolous patents and “ever-greening”.
Section 3(d) of the
Act prohibits grant of patent to inventions relating to (i) new
property of use of a known substance; and (ii) new form of a known
substance which does not result in the enhancement of the known
efficacy of that substance. Thus, it already restricts “ever-greening”. The “incremental innovations” will be
granted patents only if it does not fall within the prohibition of
Section 3(d).
Micro-organisms
Under the present Act
micro-organisms are patentable subject to satisfaction of the
other provisions of the Act. Upon review of Article 27.3 of TRIPs
and considering the need to give boost to the Indian bio-tech
industry, the Committee concluded that excluding micro-organisms
per se from patent protection would violate TRIPs. At the same
time, the Committee recommended formulation of strict guidelines
to ensure that only micro-organisms modified by substantial human
intervention are patented thereby eliminating the possibility of
granting frivolous patents. To some extent Sections 3(c) of the
Act would prevent grant of patent in relation to micro-organisms
that occur in nature. The draft Manual of Patent Practice and
Procedure as framed by the Patent Office, India also lays down as
follows:
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The living entities of natural origin such as animals, plants, in whole or any parts thereof, plant varieties, seeds, species, genes and micro-organism are not
patentable.
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The living entity of artificial origin such as micro-organism, vaccines are considered
patentable.
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The processes relating to micro-organisms or producing chemical substances using such micro-organisms are
patentable.
The Act does not define “micro-organism”, which is likely to lead to interpretational issues. The report has faced criticism from some quarters. Critics to this report say that these recommendations, if implemented, would be more beneficial to the MNCs
rather than the domestic pharmaceutical industry.
The way ahead
The recommendations as
laid down by the Committee are, however, not legally binding on
the government. The burden will be on
the Patent Office to strengthen its guidelines to comply with the
above recommendations, if the same were accepted and also on the
patent examiners to appropriately interpret and apply the same so
that the spirit of the Act is protected and enforced.
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You
can direct your queries or comments to the authors
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Source:http://patentoffice.nic.in/ipr/patent/mashelkar_committee_report.doc
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