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Test Data Protection Overview

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Test Data Protection Overview Jeffrey P. Kushan, Washington, D.C. On behalf of the Biotechnology Industry Organization (BIO) * * * What is Test Data? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Test Data Protection Overview


1
Test Data Protection Overview
BEIJING BRUSSELS CHICAGO DALLAS FRANKFURT
GENEVA HONG KONG LONDON LOS ANGELES NEW YORK
PALO ALTO SAN FRANCISCO SHANGHAI SINGAPORE
SYDNEY TOKYO WASHINGTON, D.C.
  • Jeffrey P. Kushan, Washington, D.C.
  • On behalf of the Biotechnology Industry
    Organization (BIO)

2
What is Test Data?
  • Data generated from testing of a regulated
    product to ensure the product may be safely used
    and is effective
  • Test data is generated by rigorous, comprehensive
    and controlled scientific experiments
  • Test data provides objective evidence about
    safety and effectiveness of the regulated product
  • Test data helps protect the public health
  • Regulated products may not be marketed without
    approval by government regulatory authority
  • Test data is used by regulatory authorities to
    independently determine that a product is safe
    and effective before it is placed on the market
    and used by patients

3
Examples of Regulated Products
  • TRIPS identifies two categories of regulated
    products that are entitled to protection
  • Pharmaceutical products
  • Drugs small chemical molecules
  • Biological products large chemical molecules
    such as proteins made by biotechnology, vaccines
  • Agricultural chemical products
  • Pesticides and Fertilizers chemical compounds
    used in agricultural applications
  • Source TRIPS Agreement, Article 39.3.

4
Generating Test Data is Risky, Expensive and
Time-Consuming
  • New therapeutic agents
  • On average, it costs US 1.2 to 1.3 billion and
    10-15 years to bring a pharmaceutical product
    having an active ingredient that has never been
    approved (i.e., a new chemical entity) to
    market
  • Greater than 90 of products in development fail
    before getting to clinical trials, and only 30
    of those entering clinical trials are approved
  • Clinical testing in humans is a significant
    contributor to cost and complexity of
    pharmaceutical development and clinical data
    generation, with scale of testing often thousands
    of patients over many years
  • Agricultural chemical products
  • New agricultural chemical entities typically cost
    more than US 200 million to bring to market
  • Sources Dimasi et al., Manage. Decis. Econ. 28
    469479 (2007) www.croplife.org. These
    figures incorporate the costs of failed efforts
    to bring a new product to market.

5
The Pharmaceutical Test Data Dossier
  • A compilation of data and reports describing the
    pharmaceutical product, including
  • Pre-clinical evidence, including from analysis of
    the components of the product (e.g., the active
    ingredient) by in vitro and animal testing
  • Clinical evidence, including data from well
    controlled clinical investigations that evaluate
    effects of administering the product to
    individual human subjects, and summaries and
    analysis of such data
  • Manufacturing information and data, including a
    description of the product, its components and
    properties, how the product is made,
    manufacturing batch records showing consistency
    and variations in the production of the product,
    etc.
  • Other evidence, both from public literature and
    non-public sources, relevant to safety and
    effectiveness of the product
  • Source 21 U.S.C. 355(b)(1)  505(b)(1) also,
    21 C.F.R.  314.50, which sets forth the specific
    requirements of a new drug application before the
    FDA.

6
The Pharmaceutical Test Data Dossier
  • Some information in the dossier cannot be
    publicly disclosed
  • Personal privacy restrictions prohibit disclosure
    of information concerning the experiences of
    patients who participated in the studies
  • Trade secret rights exist in various portions of
    the dossier, particularly manufacturing
    information
  • Clinical data for biologics is linked to the
    particular method used to make the biological
    product
  • During pendency of its review, the dossier as a
    whole is handled as confidential business
    information
  • The regulatory authorities will base their
    decision to approve a new pharmaceutical product
    on the dossier considered as a whole, not on
    discrete or isolated elements of the dossier

7
How is Test Data Protected from Unfair
Commercial Use?
  • By providing a period of time during which a
    regulatory authority will not rely, directly or
    indirectly, on the innovators test data to
    support approval of a third party application
  • Regulatory agencies rely on an innovators test
    data if they base their decision to approve a
    third party application on
  • A review of the data in the innovators dossier
  • An earlier approval by the same agency of the
    innovators application, or findings on the
    safety or effectiveness of the innovators
    product
  • An earlier approval by another agency of the
    innovators product, or that agencys findings on
    safety or effectiveness, or
  • Published summaries of the test data (e.g.,
    information in the approved prescribing
    instructions for the product)

8
Market Dynamics Where Data Protection Is
Provided to Innovators
  • During the data protection period, the
    innovators product competes with different
    products that can be used to treat the same
    disorder or disease
  • Regulatory authority can approve other products
    supported by complete dossiers of independently
    generated clinical data
  • Intense competition from different products in
    this period on average, new innovator products
    enter market within 2.5 years of market
    introduction of first innovative product
  • After the data protection period ends, the
    innovators product competes with generic or
    biosimilar products
  • Regulatory authorities can approve abbreviated
    applications that reference the innovator
    product, leading to less expensive versions
  • Both forms of competition benefit public health
  • Source Tufts Center for the Study of Drug
    Development, CSDD Impact Report, Marketing
    exclusivity for first-to-market drugs has
    shortened to 2.5 years, 11(5) (2009).

9
Public Health Benefits of Test Data Protection
  • Encourages companies to conduct initial clinical
    testing of new pharmaceutical products
  • Provides regulatory authorities the objective
    scientific evidence needed to evaluate and
    justify approval of new pharmaceutical products
  • Provides benefits to patients by encouraging
    clinical testing of new drugs, regardless of
    patent status, for use in treating unmet medical
    needs
  • A new chemical entity is an active ingredient
    that has never been approved by the regulatory
    authority of the country for use in the same type
    of product

10
Public Health Benefits of Test Data Protection
  • Encourages additional clinical testing of an
    approved product to enable use in treating other
    diseases
  • Many pharmaceutical products can treat multiple
    diseases, but each new use requires independent
    clinical proof of effectiveness and safety
  • Experience shows that companies conduct extensive
    additional clinical research to support new uses
    of approved pharmaceutical products during the
    period of data protection
  • Experiences with biologics approvals in the
    United States
  • 47 of approved rDNA and monoclonal antibody
    products have been approved for at least one
    additional disease/disorder beyond the original
    indication
  • One third of the new indications for these
    products were approved more than 7 years after
    the first approval
  • Source Said et al., Continued Development of
    Approved Biological Products, Boston Consulting
    Group, White Paper (Dec. 2007)

11
Public Health Benefits of Test Data Protection
  • Enables lower cost, safe and effective generic
    and biosimilar products to be brought to market
  • Products can be approved on the basis of an
    abbreviated application not having a complete
    dossier of clinical evidence
  • A generic drug must have the identical active
    ingredient and exhibit the same behavior in the
    body
  • A biosimilar product cannot be identical to the
    innovator product, and requires additional
    clinical evidence to support approval
  • Generics and biosimilars are produced for a
    defined and existing market, have a far lower
    risk of failure of development, and a
    significantly reduced cost of development
    relative to innovator products

12
Phases of a Pharmaceutical Product
AbbreviatedApproval Possible
Pre-Clinical
Clinical Development
Third Indication
Second Indication
First Indication
Data Protection Period
Start of Clinical Investigations
First Approval
Second Approval
ThirdApproval
13
Two Different Obligations in TRIPS Article 39
  • Article 39.2
  • Requires laws/regulations that enable private
    parties to prevent unauthorized disclosure of
    their confidential business information (i.e.,
    trade secret protection) by any entity, including
    government agencies and employees
  • Article 39.3
  • Requires measures that prevent a regulatory
    authority from making unfair commercial use of
    undisclosed test or other data provided to the
    authority to support grant approval of the
    innovator product

14
Article 39.3 Imposes Distinct Obligation Beyond
Non-Disclosure
  • If Article 39.3 only imposed obligation to not
    disclose confidential information, it would be
    redundant with obligations of Article 39.2
  • Separate and distinct provisions in an
    international agreement are presumed to impose
    distinct obligations
  • Second sentence of Article 39.3 requires
    protection from unfair commercial use even if a
    Member requires disclosure of some of the
    protected test data for reasons necessary to
    protect public health
  • Regulatory authorities often require a summary of
    the clinical trials to be included in the
    prescribing instructions for the product, and
    make other clinical trial information available
    online

15
What is Unfair Commercial Use
  • Something that provides an unfair commercial
    advantage to one entity at the expense of another
  • A regulatory agencys conclusion that a generic
    or biosimilar product is safe and effective
    product is necessarily based on the test data
    dossier supporting approval of the referenced
    innovator product
  • The regulatory authority thus uses the
    referenced innovators test data dossier to
    justify approval of an abbreviated application
    referencing an innovator product
  • Allowing a generic or biosimilar product to enter
    the market too soon after the referenced
    innovator product has been launched constitutes
    an unfair commercial use of innovators test data

16
The Unique Bifurcated U.S. System
  • New and generic drugs regulated under the  505
    of the Federal Food Drug and Cosmetic Act
  • Drugs generally have a small molecule active
    ingredient
  • Abbreviated New Drug Application (ANDA) may not
    be filed for a period of 5 years from original
    approval of new drug, unless it contains a patent
    challenge, in which case it may be filed 4 years
    after approval
  • If ANDA filed during fourth year, FDA may not
    approve the ANDA until 7.5 years after NDA
    approval
  • ANDA approvals take on average 2 to 2.5 years
    from filing to be approved.
  • Effectively, U.S. provides 7.5 years of data
    protection from the approval date of a new drug
    application
  • Source 21 U.S.C.  355(b)(1) (new drug
    applications) 355(b)(2) (other applications
    referencing earlier approval) 355(j)
    (abbreviated new drug applications)

17
The Unique Bifurcated U.S. System
  • Biological products are regulated under  351 of
    the Public Health Service Act
  • No current abbreviated pathway for approving
    biosimilar biological products
  • Each application (BLA) must be supported by
    independently generated clinical data
  • This means these products presently have an
    infinite period of data protection
  • Pending legislation
  • Biosimilar legislation that has passed the
    relevant House and Senate Committees would
    provide 12 years of data protection, plus an
    additional 6 months for pediatric studies
  • Source 42 U.S.C.  262 H.R.

18
European Practices
  • Drugs and biological products are regulated under
    a single legal regime in the centralized approval
    procedure of the European Medicines Agency
  • Single legal regime applies to both small
    molecule drugs and large molecule biological
    products
  • Effective period of data protection for both
    types of products is 10 years, which may be
    extended to 11 if a new indication representing a
    significant clinical benefit in comparison with
    existing therapies is approved within 8 years of
    original approval

19
Market Incentives Provided by Test Data
Protection
  • Providing test data protection encourages
    innovator companies to enter and participate in
    markets, which increases the likelihood of
  • Earlier launches of innovator products in the
    market, given the increased prospect for
    commercial success in that market
  • Improved education among caregivers about the
    pharmaceutical product, its uses and its safety
    profile
  • Entry of generic and biosimilar products once
    viable domestic market for the innovator product
    has been established
  • Domestic clinical investigations to evaluate new
    applications of product or its therapeutic
    profile in the domestic population

20
Data Protection vs. Patents
  • Two distinct and independent mechanisms
  • Patents protect technological inventions, and
  • Are limited to a specific technological advance,
    and measured by novelty/inventiveness over public
    knowledge
  • Enable owner to prevent unauthorized use of the
    invention
  • Original patents often expire around time of
    product approval due to extended period of
    development and clinical testing
  • May not be available for new products that
    contain a publicly known chemical compound, or
    for new uses discovered by additional clinical
    research
  • Often do not provide adequate commercial
    protection in countries that do not have a
    long-established or robust patent systems

21
Unique Features of Test Data Protection
  • Test Data protection
  • Is available even if the pharmaceutical product
    is not eligible to be patented, which ensures
    there is an incentive to conduct clinical testing
    needed to secure approval of new drugs and new
    uses of drugs
  • Only prohibits regulatory agency from relying on
    innovators approval to approve another
    application any entity can secure marketing
    approval by supporting the application with a
    complete and independently generated clinical
    dossier
  • Provides greater certainty than patents, both in
    developed and developing country markets, which
    functions to provide an incentive for innovator
    companies to undertake risky, expensive and
    difficult clinical testing of the product

22
Conclusions
  • Test data protection systems
  • Provide all countries with many important public
    health benefits
  • Support competition by both product innovation
    and on price
  • Test data protection under TRIPS must extend
    beyond simply preventing public disclosure or
    theft of confidential data in the test data
    dossier
  • The only viable way to provide effective test
    data protection is to defer the date on which a
    regulatory authority may rely on a prior approval
    of an innovator product to approve a generic or
    biosimilar application

23
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