Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Working Competition and Biotechnology Patent Pools
View through CrossRef
Patent pools have always been a subject of heated discussions due to their ambiguous position on the market as they bear both anti-competitive and pro-competitive characteristics. On the one hand, they create a common market for licensors and licensees, guarantee access to the industry standards (if any), as well as induce further innovation. They bear a certain risk of violating anti-trust laws”. Patent pools were introduced into life sciences quite recently. Biotechnology patent pools play an immensely important role in providing access to essential, up-todate medicines for terminal diseases that affect a great number of population in certain countries. They make medicines affordable to the local generic producers in developing and least developed countries who bring the affordable new drug formulations to the market. Furthermore, since modern medicine is largely based on gene patents, pooling is suggested to resolve the patent thicket issue around genetic diagnostics. At this moment, the most successful and global example is the Medicine Patent Pool founded in 2010 by UNITAID. Patent pools generally encompass patents that protect developed technology. However, for the pharmaceutical industry, it is of major importance that the patent pools facilitate further development of the drugs. This necessity stems from, among other factors, a) the ability of viruses to develop resistance to the treatment, b) scarcity of paediatric drug formulas, and c) the need in fixed dose drug combinations (FDCs) for the treatments requiring simultaneous consumption of several medicines such as antiretroviral drugs. As patent pools gained more popularity, concern about their adverse impact on competition practices grew as well. Despite the recognized benefits of patent pooling, such as promotion of technical progress, dissemination of technology rights as a special type of goods allowing for an even further increase in manufacturing capacity, the technology transfer block exemption under Regulation 316/2014 is inapplicable to the pooling agreements. As a result, an examination of the relationship between current EU competition law policy towards patent pools appears to be a particularly relevant and valuable subject for discussion. By establishing whether legal safeguards of the EU anti-trust framework help to reach a healthy balance between the protection of market competition and industrial development, we could identify the place of patent pooling in the context of legal solutions for distributing the benefits of health care biotechnologies.
Stockholm Intellectual Property Law Review
Title: Working Competition and Biotechnology Patent Pools
Description:
Patent pools have always been a subject of heated discussions due to their ambiguous position on the market as they bear both anti-competitive and pro-competitive characteristics.
On the one hand, they create a common market for licensors and licensees, guarantee access to the industry standards (if any), as well as induce further innovation.
They bear a certain risk of violating anti-trust laws”.
Patent pools were introduced into life sciences quite recently.
Biotechnology patent pools play an immensely important role in providing access to essential, up-todate medicines for terminal diseases that affect a great number of population in certain countries.
They make medicines affordable to the local generic producers in developing and least developed countries who bring the affordable new drug formulations to the market.
Furthermore, since modern medicine is largely based on gene patents, pooling is suggested to resolve the patent thicket issue around genetic diagnostics.
At this moment, the most successful and global example is the Medicine Patent Pool founded in 2010 by UNITAID.
Patent pools generally encompass patents that protect developed technology.
However, for the pharmaceutical industry, it is of major importance that the patent pools facilitate further development of the drugs.
This necessity stems from, among other factors, a) the ability of viruses to develop resistance to the treatment, b) scarcity of paediatric drug formulas, and c) the need in fixed dose drug combinations (FDCs) for the treatments requiring simultaneous consumption of several medicines such as antiretroviral drugs.
As patent pools gained more popularity, concern about their adverse impact on competition practices grew as well.
Despite the recognized benefits of patent pooling, such as promotion of technical progress, dissemination of technology rights as a special type of goods allowing for an even further increase in manufacturing capacity, the technology transfer block exemption under Regulation 316/2014 is inapplicable to the pooling agreements.
As a result, an examination of the relationship between current EU competition law policy towards patent pools appears to be a particularly relevant and valuable subject for discussion.
By establishing whether legal safeguards of the EU anti-trust framework help to reach a healthy balance between the protection of market competition and industrial development, we could identify the place of patent pooling in the context of legal solutions for distributing the benefits of health care biotechnologies.
Related Results
Contemporary Views on Economics of Patents
Contemporary Views on Economics of Patents
A patent is a legal right to exclude granted by the state to the inventor of a novel and useful invention. Much legal ink has been spilled on the meaning of these terms. “Novel” me...
Patent Law in Islamic Economics Challenges and Opportunities
Patent Law in Islamic Economics Challenges and Opportunities
One important way to protect intellectual property rights is to use patent law to encourage creativity and innovation. In Islamic economics, the application of patent law raises se...
Evaluation System of Patent Criteria in European Union Law
Evaluation System of Patent Criteria in European Union Law
Field and Aims: An invention is the result of the inventor's intellectual effort, which is created in the form of an industrial product or industrial process. The person who makes ...
Cooperative Patent Prosecution: Viewing Patents through a Pragmatics Len
Cooperative Patent Prosecution: Viewing Patents through a Pragmatics Len
This Article constructs a linguistics-based framework to consider patent claim construction and demonstrates that the often-told story that claim construction is broken is, in fact...
Developments in International Patent Law Harmonization
Developments in International Patent Law Harmonization
It is well known that efforts to achieve worldwide harmonization of patent systems are not yet complete. Early work on building a complete system, however, started as early as the ...
Diagnostic and Therapeutic Approaches for Endometriosis: A Patent Landscape
Diagnostic and Therapeutic Approaches for Endometriosis: A Patent Landscape
Abstract
Objective
The aim of this review is to analyse the patent filings and to systematize the main technological trends in patent protection for the diagnosis and ther...
Formation Laws of Inorganic Gas Pools in the Northern Jiangsu Basin
Formation Laws of Inorganic Gas Pools in the Northern Jiangsu Basin
Abstract In the Northern Jiangsu basin there are high pure CO2 gas pools, low condensed oil‐containing CO2 gas pools, high condensed oil‐containing CO2 gas pools and He‐containing...
Occurrence of Tick-Borne Pathogens in Ticks Collected from Cattle at Iringa and Kilombero District Councils, Tanzania
Occurrence of Tick-Borne Pathogens in Ticks Collected from Cattle at Iringa and Kilombero District Councils, Tanzania
Abstract
Background
Ticks and tick-borne diseases undermine livestock production and productivity in Tanzania. Cattle in Tanzania are challenged by several tick species an...

