IP Considerations for Firms Doing Business in China and India Legal
Affairs: Jun 1, 2012 (Vol. 32, No. 11) Ningling Wang , Mukta
Jhalani Intellectual Property Issues to Contemplate Before Making the Move With
low labor costs, deep talent pools, and large populations, China and India have
become attractive emerging markets for many western companies in the life
science industry. In recent years, we have seen a trend for western biotech and
pharmaceutical companies to establish their R&D centers or set up
operations in China and India.
Some western biotech and pharmaceutical companies have also formed joint
ventures or research collaborations with domestic companies in China and India. In the life science
industry, in addition to business and scientific considerations, IP protection
and enforcement can be critical to success. Strong patent protection worldwide
gives a patent owner leverage in negotiating deals. Patent protection in China should be obtained, although many people
are still skeptical about enforcement of patent rights in China. Without patent protection,
inventors in the life sciences lose the option of enforcing their proprietary
rights. At the same time, publication of such inventions elsewhere makes them
prior art. And a prior art defense has become an effective way for infringers
to avoid infringement liability in China. With strong patent
protection, a patentee can enforce its rights against potential infringers to
exclude them from the market. In such enforcement proceedings, more and more
potential infringers consider and challenge the validity of the patents as a
counter defense to infringement. In China, the Patent Reexamination
Board (PRB) of the SIPO is the sole jurisdiction for challenging the validity
of a patent. If one of the parties does not agree with the PRB’s decision, that
party can appeal only to the Beijing No. 1 Intermediate People’s Court. The
decision by Beijing No. 1 Intermediate People’s Court can be appealed only to
the Beijing High People’s Court. Any further appeal is not a matter of right
since the People Supreme Court in China has discretion in taking
cases from High People’s Courts. The invalidity proceeding can be long and the
potential infringer can allege invalidity challenges on different grounds. The
common grounds for invalidity in life science include a lack of sufficient
support in the specification for the patented claim scope and a lack of
inventive step. Accordingly, when preparing and prosecuting a patent
application, it is important to envision potential invalidation grounds and
make the issued patent as strong as possible in defense of invalidity
challenges.
Lack of Patent Linkage In comparison with the U.S.,
China
is not an ideal place for patent litigation, especially for biotech and
pharmaceutical companies. One important reason is that, different from the U.S., there is no patent linkage in China.
Specifically, in the U.S.,
the Hatch-Waxman Act requires a branded drug manufacturer to list its patent
numbers and expiration dates in the Orange Book with the FDA. The FDA cannot
approve a generic drug if that generic drug would infringe a brand
manufacturer’s patent listed in the Orange Book. However, there is no Orange
Book listing with the State Food and Drug Administration in China (SFDA), and
SFDA does not probe into whether a generic drug would infringe a branded
manufacturer’s patent as a condition precedent for SFDA approval of the generic
drug. It is up to the branded drug manufacturer to sue the generic drug company
for patent infringement once the generic drug gets into the market. China
is currently considering setting up patent linkage between the SIPO and SFDA. In
addition, China
does not offer data exclusivity to branded drug manufacturers. This is another
risk innovative companies need to consider before moving to China.
Ownership Issues Additional IP issues that have been troublesome in China include ownership and trade
secret protection. These issues occur often in deals such as licensing and
joint research collaborations. Due diligence by the suitor should be conducted
to ascertain the real owner of the IP prior to any deals in China. Individual inventors
normally do not have patent rights if they are employed by an entity in China
because such rights by default belong to employers under the employment
contract. Even for professors who claim to be “independent” from the
university, it is important to review their employment contract to ascertain
ownership of any inventions made by the professor. In addition, talent in the
life science area often moves from one company to another, especially in big
cities. Therefore, it is advisable to carefully review all relevant employment
contracts to ascertain who truly owns the patent rights of the invention(s)
under consideration. We have also seen companies’ valuable trade secrets
disclosed in a form of, for example, a patent application by a key scientist in
the company who later left to join another company. The publication of the
patent application makes the trade secret lose its value. Therefore, we suggest
carefully drafting the employment contract and internal policies to implement
strict procedures to prevent disclosure of trade secrets.
India Only recently has India
provided patent production for pharmaceuticals. It is important to understand
the boundaries of patentable subject matter, however, as defined by the 2005
amendments to the Indian Patent Act. Under section 3(d) of the Act, “mere
discovery of a new form of a known substance which does not result in the
enhancement of the known efficacy of that substance” is not considered a
patentable invention. Application of this section requires an understanding of
the term “efficacy.” A much-publicized dispute involving the interpretation of
section 3(d) involves Novartis and its anticancer drug imatinib mesylate.
Novartis attempted to patent a new version of its previously known imatinib
mesylate, but the Indian Patent Office rejected the patent application under
section 3(d). The Indian Patent Office initially rejected Novartis’ patent
application on the basis that the drug did not meet the novelty and efficacy
requirements of the Patent Act. After failed attempts at appealing the
rejection of its patent application, Novartis ultimately appealed to the Indian
Supreme Court, and it remains to be seen how the Supreme Court interprets
“efficacy” as used in section 3(d).
Compulsory License Another important aspect of the Indian Patent Act, which up until recently
did not get as much attention, relates to a compulsory licensing provision. The
Act allows for grant of a compulsory license three years after the grant of a
patent where (1) reasonable requirements of the public have not been met, (2)
the invention is not publicly available at a reasonably affordable price, and
(3) the invention was not worked on in India. A few months ago, the Indian
Patent Office granted a compulsory license to an Indian pharmaceutical company
for Bayer’s anticancer drug Nexavar on the grounds that the drug was not
meeting the reasonable requirements of the public, was not reasonably
affordable, and was not locally manufactured. The fate of Nexavar in India raises several concerns for innovative
pharmaceutical companies regarding the availability, pricing, and manufacturing
of patented drugs in India.
It is particularly crucial to have a strategy on “working” the invention in India, for instance, by manufacturing in India, collaborating with an Indian company, or
taking advantage of India’s
investment treaties, as applicable. Any pharmaceutical company considering
operations in India should
consider that India
does not offer data exclusivity for pharmaceuticals. In other words, a generic
manufacturer can rely on the technical data generated by an innovative company
because, in India,
that data does not enjoy a period of exclusivity. Typically, a generic
manufacturer relies on the innovator’s data with a showing of bio-equivalency
between the generic and the innovative drug. In the presence of data
exclusivity, an innovator can prevent others from relying on its clinical data.
As a result, a period of data exclusivity can provide patent-like protection to
prevent generic manufacturers from relying on the clinical data generated by
the innovator. But India
does not offer such data exclusivity protection. Thus, a pharmaceutical company
setting up operations in India
would need to consider the possibility of not having exclusivity for data that
it generates in India.
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