Sunday, September 13, 2009

Aids drugs patent rejection gets praise

       India's rejection of patent applications on two life-saving HIV/Aids drugs last week has been welcomed by health officials, who say it will ensure wider access to the medicines.
       India has the world's third highest caseload, with 2.5 million infections,behind Nigeria and South Africa.
       India's Patent Office rejected applications for leading antiretroviral drug tenofovir, manufactured by US biotechnology group Gilead, and darunavir,which is made by Ireland's Tibotec Pharmaceuticals, officials said.
       "This is a welcome decision and we have always been supporting Aids drugs should not be patented, because if they are patented it will reduce their access to common people," said B.B. Rewari, a senior official at India's National Aids Control Organisation (Naco), the main government agency battling the disease.
       A patented tenofovir drug would have cost 3,000 rupees (2,120 baht) each, but a generic would cost around 570 rupees,he said.
       "It is a welcome decision for Indian patients and for other developing countries who are battling the disease,"said Mr Rewari, who heads the country's anti-HIV/Aids national programme.
       A spokeswoman for Tibotec Pharmaceuticals said the company was reviewing the decision.
       Aids workers say both companies could challenge the decision by filing a second patent application.

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