Should not a medicine (Remdesivir) that has shown lifesaving effect in certain cases of Covid-19 be made available to
all those who need it without delay? Even if Big Pharma has a patent, there are provisions in the global trade treaties
that allow governments to issue compulsory licenses to such a lifesaving drug, and keep people over profit. This is why
medical experts are demanding governments to use compulsory licensing for generic production of such a drug to help save
lives.
Compulsory licensing is one of the key public health and social justice safeguards that allows governments to use,
produce, and import or export patented technologies in the public interest.
When confronted with intellectual property barriers that block access to affordable lifesaving treatments, governments
of countries like Thailand, Brazil, India, South Africa, Malaysia among others, have used this mechanism of compulsory
licensing in the past, to ensure lifesaving medicines reach the people who need it most (for HIV, hepatitis C, cancer,
etc). Compulsory licensing enables local production or importation of generic medicines, multiple supply options,
reduces price and increases access to lifesaving treatments for those most in need.
"Though Indian state of Maharashtra is registering high numbers of Covid-19 cases as of now, situation is equally bad in
several states. Among the medicines that have shown to work in Covid-19 are steroids and Remdesivir. The patent owner of Remdesivir, Gilead, had given voluntary license to six Indian pharmaceuticals. Even then, there is
an acute shortage of Remdesivir injections, possibly due to hoarding and racketeering, especially in Maharashtra. This
will have cascading effects in rest of India. Its maximum retail price ranges between INR 2800-5400 (as per the company
that produces it) whereas procurement rates at hospitals range between INR 600-1000. After we pointed out this
discrepancy, the Maharashtra government has once again capped the price from INR 1000 to INR 1400 per injection. Each
eligible patient needs six doses and required only for treating moderate or severe Covid cases" said Dr Ishwar Gilada,
Secretary General of Organized Medicine Academic Guild (OMAG), an umbrella network of several professional medical
experts' associations in India.
OMAG has appealed to the Indian Prime Minister to put Remdesivir in Drug Price Control Order (DPCO), as is done for
other life-saving medicines. This will help reduce the maximum retail price to affordable level and remove buffer
margins and scope for black-marketing.
Another ask of OMAG is to grant a compulsory license under Section 84 of Indian Patents Act, 1970, to ramp-up Remdesivir
production. It can bring-down procurement cost to below INR 500 per vial, to save millions of Indian Covid patients as
also several more globally, who will benefit from made-in-India generic Remdesivir.
OMAG has also insisted on rationalizing use of Remedesivir with strict adherence to the guidelines, making multiple
Remdesivir stores or Remdesivir Banks with strict sales control, and making racketeering of Remdesivir punishable under
the Epidemic Act of India.
Dr Ishwar Gilada who is also the elected President of AIDS Society of India and Governing Council member of
International AIDS Society (IAS), added that Remdesivir (GS-5734) was originally developed by Gilead Sciences in 2009, to treat Hepatitis C and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), but failed. It was then repurposed and studied as a potential treatment for Ebola and Marburg virus infections. In collaborative study it was subsequently discovered that it had antiviral activity in vitro against
multiple filoviruses, pneumoviruses, paramyxoviruses, and coronaviruses. It is now repurposed for use in Covid-19. Remdesivir was granted patent in India vide No. 7068/DELNP/2010 (IN275967)
as Markush type claims that allow important innovations to be patented and No. 7404/DELNP/2010 (IN289041) as Molecule in
2010. A compulsory license can be issued against any drug with three year old patent and hence this demand from OMAG.
One of the lessons from the global public health emergency, is that profiteering from illness has to end. It is an
essential cog-in-the-wheel of sustainable development where no-one-is-left-behind that all healthcare services reach
every human being in a rights-based manner - and - not dependent on her or his capacity to pay.
Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF or Doctors Without Borders) had earlier stated that a compulsory license is a license for
alternative production or importation of a generic version of a patented medicine which is granted by the government and
does not require the consent of the patent-holder. The Doha Declaration on TRIPS Agreement and Public Health confirms
that countries are free to determine the grounds of compulsory licenses. As we know, TRIPS is Trade-Related Aspects of
Intellectual Property Rights, which is an international legal agreement between all the member nations of the World
Trade Organization (WTO). Examples of different grounds for compulsory license include, for instance to remedy
anti-competitive practices, failure to work or insufficient working of the patent, when the patented medicine is
unaffordable or unavailable making it inaccessible to patients and when public health is at stake including but not
limited to emergency/extreme urgency, epidemics and public non-commercial use.
Bobby Ramakant is a 2008 World Health Organization (WHO) Director General’s WNTD Awardee and part of CNS (Citizen News
Service), Asha Parivar, and Socialist Party (India). Follow him on Twitter @bobbyramakant or read www.bit.ly/BobbyRamakant