If ever there was an issue that cried out for the attention of
the U.S. Supreme Court, it's pay-for-delay settlements in which
brand-name pharmaceutical companies pay their generic rivals to
drop patent challenges, thus preserving the branded drug's
exclusive hold on the market. As Merck's new lawyers at Williams
& Connolly discussed in a new petition for Supreme Court review
of last month's shocker of a ruling from the 3rd Circuit Courtof Appeals, the 3rd Circuit created a black-and-white split with
three other federal circuits when it ruled that pay-for-delay
settlements are presumptively anticompetitive. With tens of
billions of dollars spent every year on pharmaceuticals in the
United States, Merck argued, the controversy over pay-for-delay
settlements demands resolution. Even the federal government and
antitrust plaintiffs have to agree, according to Merck: They may
oppose cert in this case since they won at the 3rd Circuit, but
they've previously asked the Supreme Court to review appellate
rulings that upheld the legality of pay-for-delay settlements.
"This is the rare situation in which all of the interested
parties -- private plaintiffs, defendants and the federal
government -- agree that the issue presented is of enormous
legal and practical significance," the Merck brief, filed
Friday, said.
It will be interesting to see if the Federal Trade
Commission and the Justice Department oppose cert in the Merck
case, which involves long-running litigation over t w o
settlements of generic challenges to Schering-Plough's patent
protection on a potassium-release drug called K-Dur. The FTC, in
particular, has been campaigning for more than a decade to end
pay-for-delay settlements, which supposedly cost American consumers some $3.5 billion a year. Both the FTC and DOJ
participated in the K-Dur case at the 3rd Circuit, but since the
appeals court gave pay-for-delay challengers everything they
want -- and they did it in the circuit that's home to many of
the big drug companies -- the government may argue against
Supreme Court review this time around. (I left a message with an
FTC spokesman but didn't hear back; I also reached out to a
lawyer for plaintiffs in the 3rd Circuit case but he didn't
return my call.)
But equally interesting is the Merck brief's explanation of
what brand manufacturers consider the root cause of
pay-for-delay settlements: the 1984 Hatch-Waxman Act, which
established the framework for generic drugs to enter the
marketplace. Under Hatch-Waxman, a generic drugmaker files an
application with the Food and Drug Administration to introduce
its version of a brand-name drug, with the incentive of 180 days
of market exclusivity for the first generic to go on sale.
Typically -- and I'm stripping away a lot of complications here
-- generics assert that the patents protecting brand-name
pharmaceuticals are invalid. And typically, the brand maker
responds to that assertion with a patent infringement suit
against the generic, thereby triggering an automatic 30-month
stay of the generic's product introduction while the validity of
the brand-name patent is litigated.
Merck's brief asserted that the Hatch-Waxman framework skews
the incentives in patent litigation in a way that makes
pay-for-delay settlements inevitable. (I should note that Merck
does not employ the term "pay-for-delay," preferring instead to
discuss "Hatch-Waxman settlements.") In typical patent
litigation, the brief argued, patent validity isn't tested until
the alleged infringer has a product on the market. That means
both the patent challenger and the patent holder have skin in
the game, the brief said, since "the alleged infringer will have
to pay the patentee's lost profits or other damages (and
potentially lose its investment in developing, manufacturing,
and marketing the product) in the event it is found to have
infringed," Merck argued. "Such litigation therefore often ends
with the alleged infringer agreeing to pay a portion of its
profits to the patentee in return for the patentee's dropping
the litigation (and forgoing the remainder of its damages claim
against the alleged infringer)."
But when generics challenge brand-name patents within the
Hatch-Waxman framework, they have nothing to lose, since they're
not actually selling the allegedly infringing products. As a
result, they're not on the hook for damages if the validity
challenge fails. Brand manufacturers, on the other hand, have
much more to fear from Hatch-Waxman litigation than normal
patent suits, according to Merck. "A brand manufacturer with
patent rights will run the risk of losing the protection of
its patent -- and, with it, the opportunity to recoup the
enormous investment required to develop, obtain FDA approval for
and market a new drug," the brief said.
Those Hatch-Waxman "asymmetric litigation risks" result in
the kinds of settlements that have provoked the FTC and
antitrust plaintiffs, according to Merck. "It is often the
patentee that is willing to make a concession to the alleged
infringer," the brief argued. "That concession typically takes
the form of a license to market a generic version for some
portion of the remaining patent term -- coupled, in some cases,
with a monetary payment."
Merck isn't the only one raising questions about the
unintended warping effect of the Hatch-Waxman framework. As the
2nd Circuit wrote in its seminal 2004 pay-for-delay ruling, Inre: Tamoxifen Citrate Antitrust Litigation, several lower courts
have noted that the redistribution of risk in Hatch-Waxman
patent litigation prompts reverse-payment, or pay-for-delay,
settl e ments. The 2nd Circuit said that just because the
peculiarities of the law makes reverse-payment settlements "a
natural by-product," that doesn't necessarily mean they're
lawful. But it also held that under the circumstances of
Hatch-Waxman's risk-shifting, "we see no sound basis for
categorically condemning reverse payments employed to lift the
uncertainty surrounding the validity and scope of the holder's
patent."
For Merck, it makes good sense to assert that Congress
created the scenario that has led to pay-for-delay settlements,
since there's no clear constitutional reason for the Supreme
Court to strike them down. (The antitrust laws cited by the 3rd
Circuit are also congressional creations.) If the Supreme Court
agrees to take up the issue, look for Merck and its fellow
brand-name pharma companies to argue that if antitrust
plaintiffs and the federal government don't like the way
Hatch-Waxman has played out, they should ask Congress to change
the law.
(Reporting by Alison Frankel)
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