Transcript Document

Data Protection in compliance with Article
39 of the TRIPS Agreement
Draft Amendment to the Drugs
Act 1976
Humaira Mufti
WIPO National Seminar on Flexibilities
under the TRIPS Agreement
27-28th November, 2007
Protection of undisclosed information
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The protection of undisclosed information first
entered regional international law in Article 1711 of
the North American Free Trade Agreement of 1992
(NAFTA).
Subsequently incorporated into the worldwide
minimum standards of intellectual property law by
Article 39 of TRIPS Agreement.
Article 39 of the TRIPS Agreement
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Article 39.1.
“In the course of ensuring effective
protection against unfair competition as
provided in Article 10 bis of the Paris
Convention (1967), Members shall protect
undisclosed information in accordance with
para 2 and data submitted to governments or
governmental agencies in accordance with
paragraph 3.”
Article 39.3
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Members, when requiring, as a condition of
approving the marketing of pharmaceutical or of
agricultural chemical products which utilize new
chemical entities, the submission of undisclosed test
or other data, the origination of which involves a
considerable effort, shall protect such data against
unfair commercial use. In addition, Members shall
protect such data against disclosure, except where
necessary to protect the public, or unless steps are
taken to ensure that the data are protected against
unfair commercial use.
Art. 39.3 leaves three major issues
unresolved.
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First, it does not specify the minimum period of
data protection required by WTO members.
Second, Art. 39.3 is not clear-cut when referring
to the use of such information by the authorities,
particularly in cases of reliance, (via the so called
bioequivalence tests).
Finally, it is not clear what type of activities are
within the scope of "considerable efforts".
The TRIPS standard on data protection
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Before the entry into force of the TRIPS Agreement,
countries had full latitude to determine whether to
confer or not protection on test data.
The Agreement introduced the first international
standard on the subject, as contained in its Article
39.3.
But the Agreement only established broad
parameters for national rules, thereby allowing WTO
Member countries freedom to apply different models
for such protection.
TRIPS Standard on Data Protection
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Test data must be protected if national authorities
require its submission. Thus, if they rely on an
approval granted in a foreign country, the obligation
does not apply
Article 39.3 does not require protection be given to
data that are already publicly available.
protection is mandated only for new chemical entities.
which excludes anyway second indications, new
formulations or dosage forms.
Finally, national regulatory authorities may request
the applicant to prove that the information for which
protection is sought is the result of significant
investment
TRIPS Standard on Data Protection
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Article 39.3 requires countries to protect test data
against "unfair commercial use".
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Therefore, protection is to be conferred against
dishonest commercial practices.
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the Test data must be protected under the discipline
of unfair competition, as established in the Paris
Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property
(article 10bis) and the TRIPS Agreement (article
39.1).
Under such discipline no exclusive rights are granted,
but only the right to take legal action against whom
has obtained a commercial advantage by means of a
dishonest practice.
Definitions under Article 39 of the
TRIPS Agreement
The subject Article has not defined the
following terms allowing members flexibilities.
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“ new chemical entity” not defined.
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“Unfair commercial use” not defined.
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“Undisclosed test or other data” not defined.
Reliance by the regulatory authorities
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One of the crucial interpretative issues in Article
39.3 is whether the reliance by a national authority
on data submitted by one company (the "originator")
to evaluate a subsequent application by another
company (a "follower"), constitutes an "unfair
commercial use" of the information.
The expression "unfair commercial use" is not defined
in Article 39.
Pursuant to Article 31 (1) of the Vienna Convention,
its interpretation should be based on the ordinary
meaning of the terms of the treaty in their context
and in the light of the agreement's object and
purpose.
Controversies about interpretations:
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some developed countries argue for a minimum period
of exclusivity.
Exclusivity argument does not find support in article
39.3 of the TRIPS Agreement, since the discipline of
unfair competition, applicable in accordance with
article 39.1 of the Agreement, does not create
exclusive rights.
the definition of what an “unfair” or “dishonest”
commercial practice depends on social perceptions at
a given time.
obtaining a commercial advantage, as such, is not
condemnable under unfair competition rules
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Despite the fact that a large number of WTO
members do not provide for exclusive rights over
data, there has been no WTO ruling on the meaning
of article 39.3.
Those who do provide are either the developed
countries or those which have signed bilateral FTAs
or accepted in the accession process to the WTO.
US VS ARGENTINA AT THE WTO
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The US government initiated a case under WTO rules
complaining about Argentina’s alleged failure to
appropriately protect test data.
The dispute was settled at the consultation stage
after two years of discussions.
Argentina did not accept the US claim that exclusive
rights should be granted for test data and maintained
unchanged its law.
No further action in the framework of the WTO has
been taken by USA against Argentina, or any other
country that does not recognize data exclusivity.
Negotiating History of Article 39
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the United States sought to include NAFTA (1711.5,
1711.6, 1711.7) analogous provisions into the TRIPS
Agreement.
Position papers submitted by both the United States
and Switzerland in the late 1980s advocated the
imposition of express limiting conditions on the
release of proprietary information submitted to
governments for regulatory purposes.
The U.S. draft proposed the following
language:
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Contracting parties which require that trade secrets
be submitted to carry out governmental functions,
shall not use the trade secrets for the commercial or
competitive benefit of the government or of any
person other than the right-holder except with the
right-holders consent, on payment of the reasonable
value of the use, or if a reasonable period of
exclusive use is given the right-holder.
Brussels Draft
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the European Commission “favored less limiting
conditions” and did not specifically address
governmental functions.
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These proposals, however, met with strenuous
resistance from the outset.
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This conflict appeared in the Brussels Draft TRIPS
Agreement of 1990.
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While Article 1A of this version essentially
anticipates article 39.1 as adopted in 1994, Article 4A
contains a bracketed provision that marks off the
U.S. (and E.U.) positions from that of other countries
opposed to this new form of protection for regulatory
data.
4A Bracketed text in Brussels Draft
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4A. PARTIES, when requiring, as a condition of
approving the marketing of new pharmaceutical
products or of a new agricultural product, the
submission of undisclosed test or other data, the
origination of which involves a considerable effort,
shall [protect such data against unfair commercial
use. Unless the person submitting the information
agrees, the data may not be relied upon for the
approval of competing products for a reasonable time,
generally no less than five years, commensurate with
the efforts involved in the origination of the data,
their nature, and the expenditure involved in their
preparation. In addition, PARTIES shall] protect such
data against disclosure, except where necessary to
protect the public.
The bracket and exclusivity approach
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the bracketed provision essentially required
“protection against unfair commercial use and
disclosure, as well as nonuse of the information for
the approval of competing products, for no less than
five years, unless the person submitting the
information agrees.”
The “Dunkel Draft” of 1991
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One year later, article 39.3 of the Chairman’s Draft
Final Act of 20 December 1991, known as the “Dunkel
Draft of 1991," which became the influential
compromise draft largely adopted in the end, had
discarded the bracketed text altogether.
Dunkel Draft Agreed text now reflected
in 39.3
3. PARTIES, when requiring, as a condition of
approving the marketing of pharmaceutical or
of agricultural chemical products which utilize
new chemical entities, the submission of
undisclosed test or other data, the origination
of which involves a considerable effort, shall
protect such data against unfair commercial
use. In addition, PARTIES shall protect such
data against disclosure, except where
necessary to protect the public, or unless
steps are taken to ensure that the data are
protected against unfair commercial use.
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article 39.3 of the Dunkel Draft 1991 tracks the final
version of article 39.3 as adopted in 1994 word for
word.
The sole exception is that the term “Parties” used in
1991 was changed to “Members” in 1994.
whatever else article 39.3 means it cannot possibly
mean what it would have meant had the bracketed
obligations of the Brussels Draft of 1990 been
carried over into either the Dunkel Draft or the Final
Act of 1994.
the clear evolution of the text cannot be ignored in
favor of quasi-exclusive rights in regulatory data
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Such an interpretation would violate both article 31
of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties and
the clear teaching of the Appellate Body in the India
Mail Box Case.
With the deletion of the bracketed version of the
Brussels Final Draft of 1990 from both the Dunkel
Draft of 1991 and the Final Act of 1994, there is no
room for any interpretation that would graft a de
facto exclusive property right
Acknowledge work of Carlos Correa and Jerome H.
REICHMAN on the subject.
Doha Declaration on TRIPS and Public
Health
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access to medicine is an acknowledged right under the
Doha Declaration on TRIPS and Public Health, 2001.
The Declaration affirmed the right of member states
to interpret and implement TRIPS in a manner
supporting the protection of public health and, in
particular, access to medicine.
Reaffirmed member countries right to grant CL and
the right to determine what constitutes national
emergency and circumstances of extreme urgency
freedom to establish own regime as regard to the
rules on exhaustion of IPRs
Contd:
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the decision of WTO General Council adopted on 30th
August 2003 and the decision on the Amendment of
the TRIPS agreement adopted by the WTO General
Council on 6th December, 2005.
Does granting of Compulsory License by the
government in these circumstance constitute unfair
commercial use?
ACWL is of the view that the issuance of CL on the
account of extreme urgency, public emergency or to
remedy anti competitive behaviour does not
constitute unfair commercial use.
Draft amendment to the Drugs Act
1976 to provide Data Protection
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Definition of New Chemical Entity
Definition of undisclosed test data.
Clarification as to certain uses as not
constitute unfair commercial use such as
Use with consent of person lawfully in
control of the data.
Public emergency and situations of
extreme urgency.
When making use of para 6 system.
Expiry of patent.