Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Patent regimen gone CRAZY!?

Patent regimen gone CRAZY!?

The following story makes interesting reading.

So all I have to do is to set up a trust for xyz cancer or disease, then find a bunch of drugs used in that condition , and to make up. Multiple permutations and combinations of these drugs and apply for patents. employing good lawyers and have stupid. Patent examiners grant me a patent and Sue pharmaceutical companies for using any of these drugs in combination with a new drug.


 

U.K. trust sues UCB for royalties on Cimzia

August 5, 2010 — 10:29am ET | By
Tracy Staton

UCB could end up paying Cimzia royalties to a U.K. charitable trust. The Mathilda and Terence Kennedy Institute of Rheumatology Trust has sued the Belgian drugmaker for patent infringement in a case that mirrors earlier fights with Amgen and Wyeth.

The trust claims that it has the patent on combining drugs like Cimzia--and the Amgen/Wyeth drug Enbrel--with methotrexate. So, by promoting Cimzia for use in that combination, UCB is stepping on the trust's patent, the lawsuit claims. The trust's suit against Amgen and Wyeth was later withdrawn amid speculation that the two companies had agreed to pay royalties.

The trust states in its lawsuit that "Centocor, Abbott Laboratories, Amgen and Wyeth have paid to Kennedy tens of millions of dollars in royalties," so that speculation was right on. Now, the question is whether UCB will follow suit. Cimzia is forecast to grow to a $2 billion product, Reuters reports.

But the larger question is whether the trust's patent on discovering that two drugs work well in combination could be extended to other drug classes and combinations. After all, there are plenty of cancer meds that are add-ons to regular chemotherapy and HIV drugs that are dosed in combination. Does this mean that anytime a new class of meds is developed--and is designed to work in concert with other drugs--the first drugmaker to the patent office could get protection for that combo?

Excerpt from Free Daily FiercePharma Newsletter

- read the Reuters
story



Read more:
U.K. trust sues UCB for royalties on Cimzia - FiercePharma
http://www.fiercepharma.com/story/u-k-trust-sues-ucb-royalties-cimzia/2010-08-05#ixzz0wyKI57Ve


Patent regimen gone CRAZY!?

Patent regimen gone CRAZY!?

The following story makes interesting reading.

So all I have to do is to set up a trust for xyz cancer or disease, then find a bunch of drugs used in that condition , and to make up. Multiple permutations and combinations of these drugs and apply for patents. employing good lawyers and have stupid. Patent examiners grant me a patent and Sue pharmaceutical companies for using any of these drugs in combination with a new drug.


 

U.K. trust sues UCB for royalties on Cimzia

August 5, 2010 — 10:29am ET | By
Tracy Staton

UCB could end up paying Cimzia royalties to a U.K. charitable trust. The Mathilda and Terence Kennedy Institute of Rheumatology Trust has sued the Belgian drugmaker for patent infringement in a case that mirrors earlier fights with Amgen and Wyeth.

The trust claims that it has the patent on combining drugs like Cimzia--and the Amgen/Wyeth drug Enbrel--with methotrexate. So, by promoting Cimzia for use in that combination, UCB is stepping on the trust's patent, the lawsuit claims. The trust's suit against Amgen and Wyeth was later withdrawn amid speculation that the two companies had agreed to pay royalties.

The trust states in its lawsuit that "Centocor, Abbott Laboratories, Amgen and Wyeth have paid to Kennedy tens of millions of dollars in royalties," so that speculation was right on. Now, the question is whether UCB will follow suit. Cimzia is forecast to grow to a $2 billion product, Reuters reports.

But the larger question is whether the trust's patent on discovering that two drugs work well in combination could be extended to other drug classes and combinations. After all, there are plenty of cancer meds that are add-ons to regular chemotherapy and HIV drugs that are dosed in combination. Does this mean that anytime a new class of meds is developed--and is designed to work in concert with other drugs--the first drugmaker to the patent office could get protection for that combo?

Excerpt from Free Daily FiercePharma Newsletter

- read the Reuters
story



Read more:
U.K. trust sues UCB for royalties on Cimzia - FiercePharma
http://www.fiercepharma.com/story/u-k-trust-sues-ucb-royalties-cimzia/2010-08-05#ixzz0wyKI57Ve