Fresenius Kabi withdraws petitions
against Pfizer cancer patents
Cancer
drug major Fresenius Kabi Oncology Ltd, the Indian arm of Germany-based
Fresenius Kabi, has withdrew revocation petitions against cancer drug patents
owned by Pfizer and its subsidiaries as the former has "lost business
interest" in the molecules.
The
dispute was mainly on two products - Crizotinib, branded as Xalkori and
Axitinib, named as Inlyta - for which Pfizer has patent rights under its arms
Agouron Pharmaceuticals Inc and Sugen Inc. Both the companies has received
favourable order from the Intellectual Property Appellate Board (IPAB) on their
plea to withdraw from litigation.
Fresenius
Kabi has informed its decision to withdraw four petitions against patent of
Crizotinib and one against Axitinib, with the IPAB. The counsel representing
Pfizer informed that the company has no objection for the withdrawal. IPAB
Chairman Justice K N Basha and Technical Member (Patents) DPS Parmar took up
each matter and dismissed the revocation applications, "as they are not
pressed".
Fresenius
Kabi also gave an undertaking with the Board that it will withdraw a post grant
opposition pending with the Controller of Patents, Delhi, related to the
matter. All the miscalleneous petitions were also cancelled, with this.
According
to information available, while it has filed revocation petition against these
drugs earlier, Fresenius Kabi has lost business interest on the drug later,
leading to the withdrawal of the petition.
Xalkori
is a kinase inhibitor used to treat non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) that has
spread to other parts of the body and was caused by a defect in a gene, called
anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK). It was launched in late 2011. Pfizer, in
March this year, said that a Phase 3 study of the drug has met its primary
objective of prolonging progression-free survival of ALK-positive advanced
non-squamous NSCLC among previously untreated patients when compared to
standard platinum-based chemotherapy regimens.
According
to a Reuters report in March, this year, sales of the drug was at around $350
million a year, which according to Cowen and Co estimates would grow to $1
billion by 2020. MNCs Roche and Novartis also has products addressing the
disease in the market.
Axitinib,
sold by Pfizer under the brand Inlyta, is used to treat advanced kidney cancer
(advanced renal cell carcinoma) when one prior drug treatment for this disease
has not worked or has stopped working.
Ian
Read, Chairman and CEO of Pfizer Inc, in an earnings call by the end of July,
2014, said that the company saw the continued uptake of Xalkori and Inlyta
globally. The company officials said that Xalkori has seen revenues of $109
million for the second quarter of 2014, with an increase of 59 per cent over
the previous year and Inlyta also has seen an uptake in key new regions with
$101 million sales with an increase of 44 per cent operationally from last
year.
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