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ANDAs – Key Regulatory and Legislative Issues

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Title: ANDAs – Key Regulatory and Legislative Issues


1
ANDAs Key Regulatory and Legislative Issues
  • September 19, 2002
  • PLI Biotechnology Law ConferenceSan Francisco,
    California

2
PART I Power
  • Protecting and PreservingA Drug Franchise Under
    Waxman-Hatch
  • Exclusivity and the 30-month Stay

3
Market Protections Available
  • Patents (and extensions)
  • Traditional enforcement
  • Listing patents in FDA's "Orange Book"
  • Statutory exclusivities/extensions under
    Waxman-Hatch
  • Other strategies

4
Listing Patents in FDA's "Orange Book"
  • Requires patent certification by generic
    competitors
  • If approval sought pre-expiration, generic must
    notify sponsor of bases for alleged invalidity or
    non-infringement.
  • Sponsor may sue for infringement and impose
    30-month stay of generic approval.

5
Statutory Exclusivities Under Waxman-Hatch
  • New Chemical Entity (NCE) Exclusivity
  • Prohibits the filing of an ANDA (or 505(b)(2)
    NDA) for a product that contains the NCE for 5
    years after approval of the first NDA.
  • (4 years if ANDA includes a Paragraph IV
    challenge to listed patent)
  • NCE "a drug that contains no active moiety that
    has been approved by FDA in any other NDA."

6
Statutory Exclusivities
  • 3-Year Exclusivity
  • Available for NDAs which contain
  • Reports of "new" "clinical trials"
  • That were "essential to approval" of the NDA
  • Conducted or sponsored by the applicant
  • FDA may not approve an ANDA or 505(b)(2) NDA for
    3 years after approval
  • Applies for new indications, Rx ? OTC switch, new
    dosing regimen, and some other labeling changes.
    Carve out for pediatric labeling.

7
Statutory Exclusivities -- Other
  • Orphan Drug Exclusivity
  • 7 year exclusivity
  • Drugs for rare conditions (lt200,000 people in
    U.S.)
  • Pediatric Exclusivity
  • 6-month extension of existing patent or
    Waxman-Hatch exclusivity
  • 180-day generic (ANDA) exclusivity

8
Generic Drug Strategies
  • Generic industry -- diverse in sizes and
    approaches of companies
  • Business factors influencing drug selection
  • Market size, pricing of innovator product
  • Patent landscape
  • Strategic "fit" with production capabilities,
    therapeutic or technical areas of focus (if any)
  • Chance of 180-day exclusivity other generic
    entry
  • Ease of marketing
  • Other some firms are dosage form oriented

9
Generic Defense Strategies
  • Patent listing, litigation
  • Development of follow-on/ancillary patents
  • Strategy may be impacted by pending legislation
  • Amendments seeking 3-year exclusivity
  • New indication for original product (limited
    utility)
  • Changed dosage form
  • New dosing regimen
  • New strength(s)

10
PART II Problems with Power
  • Federal Trade Commission Oversight of Patent
    Litigation Settlements Between Big Pharma and the
    Generic Industry
  • and
  • Other Alleged Nefarious Activity

11
Abbott Geneva 2000
  • Drug Hytrin (terazosin HCl)
  • Alleged antitrust violation Abbott paid Geneva
  • to not sell an approved capsule version while the
    companies litigated patent issues on the tablet
    version
  • not transfer or relinquish Genevas 180-Day ANDA
    Exclusivity rights thus, keeping other
    generics off the market
  • Resolution consent order

12
Abbott Geneva
  • Consent order
  • bars agreements that
  • restrict ANDA applicant from giving up 180-day
    exclusivity or
  • restrict ANDA applicant from entering the market
    with a non-infringing product
  • agreements to pay to stay off market done to
    settle patent litigation need court OK and FTC
    chance to comment
  • required Geneva to waive its 180-day exclusivity
    rights on a Hytrin tablet so other generics could
    enter market

13
Schering AHP/ESI Upshur-Smith
  • Drug K-Dur (potassium chloride)
  • Alleged antitrust violation agreements to
    settle patent litigation
  • Upshur-Smith for , agreed to stay off market
    as first to file a Para. IV patent cert., had
    180-day Exclusivity its delay in marketing meant
    subsequent ANDA filers could not go to market
  • Resolution July 2002 an FTC administrative
    law judge threw out the FTC action saying deal
    was really procompetitive

14
Hoechst-Marion-Rousell Andrx
  • Drug Cardizem CD
  • Alleged antitrust violation agreements to
    settle patent litigation by which, for
  • Andrx agreed to stay off the market
  • Andrx agreed to not relinquish its 180-day
    Exclusivity rights
  • Resolution consent order --

15
Hoechst-Marion-Rousell Andrx
  • Consent order (similar to Hytrin)
  • barred from agreeing to NOT relinquish 180-day
    exclusivity rights (which, if kept, can preclude
    subsequent generic filers from marketing even if
    approved and even if patent expired)
  • barred from agreeing to restrictions on entering
    market with a non-infringing generic
  • Interim patent litigation settlements involving
    payments to generics require Court OK and notice
    to FTC

16
Other Alleged Nefarious Activity Biovail Patent
Listing Case
  • Drug Tiazac (diltiazem)
  • Alleged violative activity
  • filing a patent in Orange Book (O.B.) that did
    not claim marketed drug effectively kept
    generic off due to need to certify to new patent
  • illegal exclusive marketing license with patent
    holder (differed from Biovail)

17
Other Alleged Nefarious Activity Biovail Patent
Listing Case
  • Resolution consent order
  • Biovail to divest part of exclusive patent
    license
  • Biovail to not enforce any rights that would
    trigger a 30-month Waxman-Hatch
  • barred from wrongfully listing patents in O.B.

18
Part III Statutory Solutions to Power Problems
  • An Overview of McCain-Schumer
  • The Greater Access to Affordable Pharmaceuticals
    Act of 2001
  • S. 812

19
The 1984 Compromise
  • Strengthen incentives for innovative research by
    partially restoring patent time lost due to FDA
    approval delays.
  • Facilitate generic competition by establishing
    ANDA process and allowing patent challengers to
    receive 180-day generic exclusivity period.

20
Results of 1984 Compromise
  • Generic share of total Rx has skyrocketed (19 -
    43).
  • Cost of innovation has skyrocketed as new
    therapies become more elusive.
  • Legal challenges have scrambled FDA's
    implementing regulations, leading to costly
    uncertainty and allegations of abuse.

21
McCain-Schumer "Findings"
  • Drug costs rising at "alarming rate"
  • More generic competition will lower prices
  • More generic competition needed
  • FTC has found restraints of trade between
    companies
  • No finding re research incentives

22
Orange Book Listing
  • Patents that "claim the drug for which the
    application was approved," or
  • Patents that claim an approved method of use,
  • Must be submitted to FDA within 30 days of NDA
    approval, or 30-days of issuance (if issued
    post-approval)

23
Late Listing Penalty
  • Failure of NDA holder to timely list will bar
    patent holder (who may be different person) from
    enforcing the patent against any person who
  • has filed an ANDA or 505(b)(2) NDA, or
  • manufactures, uses, or sells an approved generic
    or 505(b)(2) drug.

24
Listing Challenges
  • ANDA applicants can bring civil lawsuit seeking
    correction or removal of listed patent
    information.
  • Only pending applicants may sue.
  • Only applies to patents listed at time of NDA
    approval.
  • No "damages" allowed.

25
Claim-by-Claim -IV Certifications
  • For patents that
  • Include both product claim and method of use
    claim(s), or
  • Contain multiple method of use claims,
  • Paragraph IV Certifications, and "viii
    statements" must be claim-specific.

26
30-Month Stay Limitation
  • The 30-month stay of Paragraph IV ANDA approval
    may only be imposed with respect to patents
    listed at time of initial NDA approval, not
    post-approval patents.
  • For "other patents" "not described in clause
    (iii)" but listed in the Orange Book, innovator
    must seek PI within 45 days If PI denied,
    immediate approval possible. If PI granted,
    approval delayed until case resolved.

27
One-Shot Patent Enforcement
  • In addition to not being able to enforce
    late-listed patents, if no lawsuit is brought
    within 45 days of a Paragraph IV Notification to
    a listed patent, a patent owner is "barred from
    bringing a civil action for infringement" with
    respect to drug under the ANDA.

28
Generic Exclusivity Eligibility
  • Reverts to prior FDA requirement that first
    Paragraph IV applicant must be sued to get
    exclusivity.
  • Appears to maintain patent-by-patent exclusivity
    approach.

29
Generic Exclusivity Triggers
  • Reverts to "final" court decision trigger rule to
    start 180-day exclusivity period.
  • Adds settlement or consent decree as a triggering
    event if it contains a specific finding of
    invalidity/non-infringement.

30
Generic Exclusivity Forfeiture
  • Failure to market w/in 60 days of final approval
    or court decision (whichever is later)
  • Withdrawal of ANDA
  • Amendment from IV to III
  • Failure to obtain tentative approval w/in 30
    months.
  • Failure to challenge newly listed patents.
  • FTC finds unlawful conduct by applicant

31
"Rolling" Generic Exclusivity
  • If first challenger forfeits exclusivity, all
    subsequent ANDAs eligible for approval.
  • If first subsequent ANDA to get effective
    approval was also the first subsequent filer
    (i.e., second overall filer), then it receives
    exclusivity.
  • No other subsequent ANDA eligible.

32
Bioequivalence Provisions
  • The 1992 amendments to 21 C.F.R. Part 320 "shall
    continue in effect as an exercise of authorities
    under FDCA sections 501, 502, 505, and 701,"
    but may be amended by FDA.
  • "This section shall not be construed to alter the
    authority of HHS to regulate biological
    products under the FDCA (21 U.S.C. 301 et
    seq.). Any such authority shall be exercised
    under that Act as in effect on the day before the
    date of enactment of this Act."

33
Part IV the Future Generic Biologics???
  • No consensus view exists that any current legal
    mechanism can be used to support approval of a
    generic biologic
  • Why?
  • Legally, biologics licensed under Public Health
    Service Act, not Waxman-Hatch
  • Difficulty (alleged?) in characterization

34
Generic Biologics
  • "One cannot completely characterize the
    biological product and that in itself is an
    issue, and quite frankly with biological products
    you really dont have a homogeneous product, you
    have a defined range of biological components for
    which you find consistency in a particular
    clinical outcome. The challenges of analytical
    technology are still very great for
    characterizing biologics."
  • -- Katherine Zoon, CBER

35
Generic Biologics Under 505(b)(2)?
  • For Biologics originally approved under an NDA,
    FDA will accept a 505(b)(2) for a generic
    version
  • Examples include naturally-derived active
    ingredients (from animal or botanical sources) or
    those derived from recombinant technology (e.g.,
    insulin, HGH)
  • For BLA-approved products, no generic approval
    pathway

36
What is a 505(b)(2) Product ?
  • Not a completely new product,
  • Not a generic,
  • A product with some differences from a previously
    approved product.
  • Approval requires clinical data, but the studies
    may have been conducted by others.

37
How is 505(b)(2) Different?
  • The applicant and FDA may rely on prior FDA
    safety and efficacy determinations, based on
    studies conducted by someone else even though the
    applicant does not have a right of reference to
    the data. 21 U.S.C. 355(b)(2)
  • Safety and efficacy can also be supported by
    published reports

38
Types of 505(b)(2) NDAs
  • New Chemical Entity (rarely)
  • Changes to a Previously Approved Drug
  • New dosage form, dosing regimen, strength, or
    route of administration
  • New indication
  • New active ingredient
  • New inactive ingredient that requires studies
    beyond limited confirmatory studies
  • Rx ? OTC switch (Claritin)
  • Duplicates of approved drugs that cannot be
    approved under an ANDA

39
Patent and Exclusivity Issues
  • 505(b)(2) NDA must include patent
    certification(s).
  • 505(b)(2) NDA must also list any relevant
    patent(s).
  • Same Paragraph IV challenge system as ANDAs,
    EXCEPT, no 180-day exclusivity period.

40
Patent and Exclusivity Issues
  • A 505(b)(2) product may itself qualify for 3 or 5
    years of new drug exclusivity
  • 3-year exclusivity requires
  • New clinical studies (other than BE studies)
  • Conducted by the applicant
  • Essential to the approval of the application
  • 5-year exclusivity for "New Chemical Entities"
  • NCEs can be old drugs (i.e., ingredient never
    approved under an NDA)

41
Patent and Exclusivity Issues
  • Waxman-Hatch Exclusivities block ANDAs and
    505(b)(2) NDAs, but cannot block a "full" NDA.
  • 3-year exclusivity blocks other pending
    505(b)(2)s, regardless of filing date creates
    race to approval.
  • Only the first 505(b)(2) for a change can receive
    exclusivity. Studies for later applications
    deemed not essential for approval.
  • 5-year exclusivity does not block other
    505(b)(2)s that were filed before first approval.

42
Legal Challenges andOpportunities Under
505(b)(2)
  • Has FDA Expanded 505(b)(2) Beyond the Scope
    Intended by Congress?
  • What Opportunities and Pitfalls Await the
    505(b)(2) Applicant?
  • Is 505(b)(2) A Viable Pathway for "Generic
    Biologics?"

43
Pfizer/Pharmacia's Challenge To FDA's 505(b)(2)
Approach
  • Requests amendment of 505(b)(2) Guidance and 21
    C.F.R. 314.54
  • Requests FDA not to approve any 505(b)(2) NDA
    based on proprietary data
  • Requests FDA to not assign A rating to any
    approved 505(b)(2) Drug

44
Pfizer/Pharmacia Petition Statement of Grounds
  • Reliance on proprietary data not authorized by
    FDCA for 505(b)(2) NDAs
  • Published Studies vs.
  • Proprietary Data vs.
  • FDA Findings of Safety/Efficacy
  • Reliance on proprietary data would be an
    unconstitutional taking
  • A ratings not permitted for 505(b)(2) drugs

45
Which Way is the Generic Biologics Wind Blowing ??
  • No 505(b)(2) approved yet for a biotech product
  • FDA Guidance on Well-Characterized Biologics
    a manifesto for action?
  • Transfer of CBER therapeutics review divisions to
    CDER a harbinger of a bureaucracy being
    repositioned to handle generic biologics?

46
A Few Predictions and Questions
  • FDA will not do it on its own will require
    statutory authorization
  • McCain-Schumer will not be the vehicle, but may
    be regarded by some as necessary itself to be
    enacted before tackling generic biologics
  • Is the generic industry ready to challenge
    technologically?

47
A Few Predictions and Questions
  • Where does the science of characterization and
    replication stand on large molecules?
  • How will bioequivalence be judged?
  • Are the drug models relevant?
  • If not, will generic biologics always require
    comparative clinical studies?

48
Questions?
  • Call, e-mail, fax or writeMichael A. Swit,
    Esq.
  • Law Offices of Michael A. Swit
  • 539 Samuel Ct., Suite 229
  • Encinitas, California 92024
  • 760-815-4762 ? 760-454-2979 (fax)
  • mswit_at_fdacounsel.com
  • http//www.fdacounsel.com

49
About the speaker ...
  • Michael A. Swit has extensive experience in all
    aspects of FDA regulation with a particular
    emphasis on drugs and medical device regulation.
    In addition to his regulatory law experience, Mr.
    Swit also served for three and a half years as
    vice president and general counsel of
    Pharmaceutical Resources, Inc. (PRI) a prominent
    generic drug company and, thus, brings an
    industry and commercial perspective to his
    representation of FDA-regulated companies. While
    at PRI from 1990 to late 1993, Mr. Swit
    spearheaded the companys defense of multiple
    grand jury investigations, other federal and
    state proceedings, and securities litigation
    stemming from the acts of prior management. Mr.
    Swit then served from 1994 to 1998 as CEO of
    Washington Business Information, Inc. (WBII) a
    premier publisher of FDA regulatory newsletters
    and other specialty information products for the
    FDA publishing company. Before starting
    FDACounsel.com, he was with Heller Ehrman from
    May 2001 to May 2003, and also twice in private
    practice with McKenna Cuneo, from 1988 to 1990
    and, most recently, from 1999 to 2001, first in
    that firms D.C. office and most recently, in its
    San Diego office. He first practiced FDA
    regulatory law with the D.C. office of Burditt
    Radzius from 1984 to 1988. Mr. Swit has taught
    and written on a wide variety of subjects
    relating to FDA law including, since 1989,
    co-directing a three-day intensive course on the
    generic drug approval process, serving on the
    Editorial Board of the Food Drug Law Journal,
    and editing a guide to the generic drug approval
    process, Getting Your Generic Drug Approved,
    published by WBII. Mr. Swit holds an A.B., magna
    cum laude, with high honors in history, in 1979,
    from Bowdoin College, and earned his law degree
    from Emory University in 1982. He is a member of
    the California, Virginia and District of Columbia
    bars.
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