Health Council Advises Brazil to Break Patent on Three AIDS Drugs

Brazil should break the patents on three HIV/AIDS drugs, whose cost could jeopardize national anti-HIV efforts, a Brazilian health agency has advised .

The recommendation of the Brazilian National Health Council on August 11 would allow the country to make generic HIV drugs that are much cheaper than their brand name versions.


The council says this year alone Brazil will spend US$ 420 million buying drugs for 136,000 patients. Eighty per cent of this will be spent on three drugs: Lopinavir, made by Abbott Laboratories, Nelfinavir by Merck Sharp and Tenofovir by Gilead.


The high cost of brand-name drugs is threatening the sustainability of the Brazilian Program for the Combat of AIDS, which is widely regarded as a model for fighting HIV/AIDS in developing countries, says the council.


For several months now, the government has been negotiating with the pharmaceutical companies that hold the patents to reduce the price of the three drugs.


Under the internationally agreed TRIPS (Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights) Agreement, if the nation’s health is at threat, a developing country can invoke a ‘compulsory license’ allowing them to make drugs without paying the patent-holder.


Brazil’s 1996 intellectual property law also allows patents to be broken when companies use exploitative pricing policies.


Brazil threatened three years ago to break Nelfinavir’s patent, but it eventually negotiated a lower price with the drug company. Earlier this year, the country said it would break the patent on Lopinavir, a threat it dropped after Abbott Laboratories agreed to drop the price of the drug from US$ 1.17 to US$ 0.68 for one capsule.


But last week, an announcement from Brazilian public laboratories that they could make the drug for US$ 0.40 kick-started new negotiations.


Because of intense price negotiations and the volume of drugs it buys, Brazil pays far less than other Latin American countries do for HIV/AIDS drugs. For Lopinavir, for example, Mexico pays US$ 2.40 per capsule and Argentina US$ 1.97.


On August 11, the council recommended that Brazil immediately begin producing the drugs locally, strengthen state laboratories and provide more financial resources for research.


It added that any commercial retaliation on the part of the companies against Brazil for breaking the patents should be considered an illegal act.


Council member Carlos Duarte says the Brazilian health ministry has 30 days to approve or suggest changes to the council’s recommendation.


The National Health Council is composed of representatives of consumers, government officials and companies.
 
This article appeared originally in Science and Development Network – www.scidev.net.

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil Ponders an Agribusiness Overhaul to Face Global Crisis

How the global agricultural crisis will impact agriculture should be the theme of a ...

What Brazil Lacks Is a Project of Inclusion

Over the decades we have created in Brazil the idea that economic growth is ...

Brazil Forecasts 4.5% GDP Growth and 4% Inflation for Next Three Years

Brazil’s Minister of Planning, Budget, and Management, Paulo Bernardo, affirmed yesterday that the 2006 ...

Germany and Brazil Join Forces in US$ 3 Billion Steel Project

Luiz Fernando Furlan, Brazil’s Minister of Development, Industry and Foreign Trade, participated last week ...

Brazilian Chicken Exports Grow 20%

Brazilian chicken exports amounted to 231,871 tons in March, for revenues of US$ 256.8 ...

Narcotraffic Deals the Cards in Brazil

Waldogate, the scandal that is rocking the Lula administration in Brazil, has been under ...

Brazil’s Fragole Uses Art to Sell Clothes Worldwide

A garment factory from Porto Alegre, capital of the southernmost Brazilian state of Rio ...

In Brazil, Chinese President Blames US for Double Standard in Cyberspace

Cyber security was one of the issues raised by Chinese President Xi Jinping during ...

Brazil Shows It Can Be World’s Granary Without Cutting the Amazon

In Brazil, grain crushers have extended a two-year-old moratorium on the purchase of soybeans ...

IMF Forecasts Puny 3.5% Growth for Brazil and 6.9% for Developing Nations

Economic growth in Brazil will be 3.5% this year and in 2007, lower than ...