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Main Topic: C) GENETIC ENGINEERING

Obama calls for generic biotech drugs

 

President Obama's budget aims to foster generic competition for costly biotech drugs used to treat cancer and other intractable ailments.

Biologic drugs are produced from living organisms - not from chemicals. They are often the first-line treatments for diseases that involve the immune system, such as cancer, rheumatoid arthritis and multiple sclerosis. But the medications are among the costliest, with many easily exceeding $1000 a month.

When the patent expires on a drug made from chemicals, generic manufacturers cam enter the market by showing the Food and Drug Administration that their version contains the same active ingredients, and is identical in strength, dosage and other characteristics to the brand medication.

The generic company does not have to replicate all the tests that went into developing the original medication. That regulatory shortcut dramatically lowers the cost of developing a generic drug, allowing patients to save an estimated $8 to $10 billion a year. But there's no such process for approving generic versions of biologic drugs.

Debate over the issue has dragged on for years over issues of quality and equitable treatment for the innovator companies that invest in developing the original version of a medication. One thorny question involves whether biologic drugs should get protection from competition for longer than the 20 years from submission of a patent now generally given. Obama's budget called for resolving that debate.

The budget documents said that the administration will accelerate access to make affordable generic biologic drugs available through the establishment of a workable regulatory, scientific and legal pathway. Also, it will work to prevent biologic manufacturers from reformulating brand name drugs so that a slight change wins them additional years of patent protection.

More information available at: www.usatoday.com/news/health/2009-02-27-obama-medicine_N.htm

 

       
     
IOMS Newsletter - 12 August 2009  
Issue No. 002/09
 
 
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