The international health organisations, protesting against Swiss pharmaceutical major Novartis AG's legal challenge to provisions of the Indian Patent Act supporting generic drug production have found high-profile supporters from the US and the European Union. |
Henry Waxman, chairman of the Government Reform Committee of the US Congress, and five members of the European Parliament have expressed solidarity with the protesters. |
The Chennai High Court is to take up the company's petition on Thursday. The Novartis petition challenges the constitutional validity of Section 3 (D) of the Indian Patent Act which restricts the grant of patents to existing drugs to significant improvements with proven therapeutic advantages. |
It is also challenging a decision of the Indian patent office to reject a patent to its blockbuster blood cancer drug Glivec (Imatinib Mesylate). |
Waxman, in a letter to Novartis Chairman Daniel Vasella, said while he did not dispute Novartis's right to apply for a patent or appeal against patent denial, he was concerned about the company's attempt to influence a domestic Indian law that could have a severe impact on access to medicines, both for India's citizens and poor nations around the world. |
Waxman is the co-sponsor of the Drug Price Competition and Patent Term Restoration Act, a landmark law of the US Congress that allows more space for generic drug supplies in that country. |
The EU parliamentarians said "as representatives of European citizens," they had grave concerns regarding Novartis's action against a government that chose to protect public health and promote access to medicines for all. |