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New Trade Deal Would Benefit Big Pharma At AIDS Programs' Expense First Posted: 10/5/11 12:36 PM ET Updated: 10/5/11 03:00 PM ET This piece is a continuation of The Huffington Post's collaboration on trade issues with The Dylan Ratigan Show, called Trading Our Future. According to leaked documents from the talks,
"This While the potential repercussions are most obvious
in The Office of the U.S. Trade Representative, the federal agency with formal responsibility for the negotiations, is aware of the concerns. But a USTR spokesperson, who requested anonymity, says the agency needs restrictive patent standards in order to "incentivize" drug companies to supply medicine. The same view is frequently voiced by And plenty of economic data suggest that the American patent regime does not foster useful medical innovation. Pharmaceutical companies spend about twice as much money marketing their drugs as they do on researching and developing them, and a tremendous portion of drug research is conducted by universities and the federal government's National Institutes of Health. Much of the research pharmaceutical companies do conduct is simply not relevant to public health concerns, with money pouring into projects for hair loss, for instance, while funding for diseases that primarily afflict the poor, like tuberculosis, stays in perpetual short supply. "The drug companies would say it generates research, but the evidence is very questionable, because much of the research is not directed at important diseases," says Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz. USTR's efforts have alarmed some congressional Democrats, eight of whom wrote a letter to USTR head Ron Kirk emphasizing that the Obama administration's trade proposals are significantly more restrictive than the access-to-medicine terms negotiated in trade deals with Peru, Panama and Colombia under President Bush in 2007. "The 2007 bipartisan 'May 10th agreement' was an important step in moving U.S. trade policy back toward a more balanced approach to promoting innovation and health in trade agreements with developing countries," the Aug. 2 letter reads. "We are concerned about reports that the balance is once again shifting away from the progress achieved in those past efforts ... a move that would jeopardize treatment goals and millions of lives." Nevertheless, in several rounds of negotiations, the Obama administration has continued to press for a hard-line patent regime, claiming that stricter rules build on existing requirements that encourage innovation. The USTR spokesperson tells HuffPost that That claim directly conflicts with PEPFAR's official
2010 report (PDF) on its operations in But the remaining 2 percent of drugs that are patented -- and thus far more expensive -- are a significant financial burden. Many of these patented medicines are "second-line" drugs, which patients need to combat HIV once the infection develops resistance to standard treatments. PEPFAR has expressed particular concern about Kaletra, a key second-line drug produced by Abbott Laboratories, one of a handful of multinational pharmaceutical companies with influence over the Trans-Pacific talks thanks to its position on a USTR advisory board. "A key driver is the cost of Abbott products,"
reads the 2010 report on AIDS relief in "Work is continuing with intellectual property experts ... to determine if there are any legal grounds to enable the procurement of generic [Kaletra]," the report continues. That suggests patented medicine is a big financial hurdle for the program, contrary to USTR's claim. PEPFAR declined to comment for this article. The framework proposed in a leaked draft of the
Trans-Pacific pact builds off the The World Trade Organization requires all countries
to grant 20-year patents on medicine, but gives nations substantial
leeway over which specific drugs actually receive patents. Less-developed
countries with pressing epidemics often do not permit patent protections
for drugs that receive monopoly rights in the According to leaked documents from the Trans-Pacific
talks, the Public health advocates refer to these types of patents as "evergreening patents" -- or even "junk patents" -- because they allow companies to extend their monopolies beyond the 20-year WTO window without actually creating a new medicine. The World Health Organization frowns on these secondary patents and has said they should be rejected. But USTR is expressly seeking to require countries to issue patents on "any new form, use, or method of using a known product ... even if such invention does not result in the enhancement of the known efficacy of that product," according to the leaked draft of the trade agreement. "It's an invitation to the pharmaceutical industry to extend drug monopolies and charge unaffordable prices for medicines," says Rohit Malpani, director of Oxfam's Access to Medicines campaign. "Not only do these restrictions deny affordable medicines to poor people in developing countries; they also encourage drug companies to focus on extending monopolies for existing medicines, instead of investing in research and development to develop the new medicines needed to improve treatment outcomes around the world." The USTR spokesperson tells HuffPost that these secondary patents encourage companies to develop new uses for drugs and improve on existing drugs in ways that benefit developing nations. The agency also argues that even if a company obtained such secondary patents, the original compound would be available for generic competition. But public health advocates say that, in practice,
drug companies do extend their monopolies for years with these patents,
by filing for protection on secondary aspects of existing drugs -- sometimes
repackaged under a new brand -- that are essential for use in a certain
regions. The heat-stable version of Kaletra, for instance, is prized
by doctors in Africa and hot Asian nations such as "USTR wants to create brand-new monopolies
on older drugs, for formulations that are developed with the The strict patent protections in the leaked draft of the Trans-Pacific negotiations come as no surprise to many public health advocates, who point to tight connections between the Obama administration, including USTR, and the pharmaceutical industry. While doctors and nonprofits have been denied
access to key documents and details of the negotiations, corporate executives
and lobbyists -- including the top lobbyist at Abbott -- have been permitted
to review key texts in the trade pact thanks to their positions on The Industry Trade Advisory Committee on Chemicals, Pharmaceuticals, Health/Science Products and Services , which provides USTR with input on medical issues, features representatives from three Big Pharma companies, as well as two chemical firms and seven medical technology companies. Another consultative group, the Industry Trade Advisory Committee on Intellectual Property Rights, includes representatives from drug giant Johnson & Johnson, as well as the drug industry lobbying groups PhrMA and BIO. A representative from the U.S.-China Business Council, an umbrella group that includes Abbott and heavyweights Merck and Pfizer, is also on the board. "The issues under consideration could have
dramatic impacts on public health systems across the developing world,"
says Malpani of Oxfam. "The lack of transparency has prevented
public health and public interest groups from ensuring that the But public health groups don't point just to those advisory boards. Stanford McCoy, USTR's top trade negotiator for intellectual property, lobbied on intellectual property at the influential D.C. law firm Covington & Burling before moving to USTR in 2006. His top deputy, Kira Alvarez, was a lobbyist for the drug company Eli Lilly before joining the agency. Then there's William Daley, President Barack Obama's
chief of staff, who was on Abbott's board until he took his current
role at the beginning of this year and who has, as The Huffington Post
reported, a long history of supporting corporate patent rights on critical
AIDS medicines. Daley served on Abbott's board in 2007 when Though Abbott spokesman Dirk Van Eeden declined to comment
on the Abbott board's activities surrounding the An Obama administration spokesperson, who would only speak on the condition of anonymity, says Daley is not involved in official Trans-Pacific negotiations. But Daley has been lobbied on the trade pact by both the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), suggesting he is playing at least an informal role in the negotiations. The USTR spokesperson tells HuffPost that "the transparency and inclusiveness of these negotiations are unprecedented" and says the agency has reached out to several public health advocates for comment on the agreement. The trouble is, USTR has asked for comment on documents that it bans public health professionals from actually viewing. "It's pretty insulting for USTR to claim these negotiations are transparent," says Love, who notes that USTR has reached out to his group for comment. "As a practical matter, we can't offer much input unless we see the text or have someone at least explain what it says." The USTR spokesperson declined to comment on the leaked proposal when asked by HuffPost. But the agency's secrecy is bewildering to public health advocates. "The other countries can see the documents. The drug lobbyists can see the documents. Why can't we?" says Judit Rius Sanjuan, manager of Doctors Without Borders' Access to Essential Medicines campaign. Left in the dark by the official channels of trade pact negotiations, public health groups must rely on documents illegally sent to them to stay informed. Much of the concern among Oxfam, Doctors Without Borders, Public Citizen and KEI stems from a leaked version of the trade pact's intellectual property chapter, posted online at KEI. The nonprofit groups would not disclose who leaked the draft, citing the need to protect their source, and USTR would not comment on the validity of the document. * * * * * Still, the high prices of new, patent-protected second-line HIV drugs remain a problem. Over time, most people infected with HIV will develop resistance to standard treatments and need the second-line drugs, according to the WHO, meaning demand for these drugs will only increase over time. Further, older medications often come with severe
side effects -- the federal government's report on Vietnam AIDS relief
cites "severe anemia" as a common one. These older drugs are
also less effective in developing nations, according to experts, because
they need refrigeration, which is often not readily available, or have
highly complex treatment schedules that either require regular laboratory
access or prove hard to follow for people living on a few dollars a
day without a consistent routine. Newer drugs, such as the heat-stabilized
version of Kaletra prized by PEPFAR for its "We need the newer medicines, which are massively
more expensive and more likely to be patented," says Matthew Kavanaugh,
director of Public health advocates say patent restrictions
have also caused AIDS treatment gaps in the Newer medications are more effective and come with fewer side effects, making them far preferable to older generic drugs. But the high prices on these critical new medications have sparked a funding shortage in the federal government's domestic AIDS relief program, forcing more than 9,000 low-income Americans onto waiting lists for HIV drugs. "The waiting lists are a national disgrace," says James Driscoll, a consultant to the AIDS Healthcare Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to eradicating HIV. Driscoll and other public health advocates emphasize that this waiting list exists in the world's richest country -- a sign that applying the same patent standards in developing countries could prove disastrous. The Obama administration's efforts to restrict the ability of developing countries to access medication goes beyond HIV treatment: The standards currently being pushed by USTR in the trade deal would apply to all drugs, including vaccines and treatments for heart disease, cancer and other life-threatening illnesses. But the effect the Trans-Pacific deal could have
on AIDS treatment is particularly poignant, with the government spending
millions on PEPFAR programs in Over the last 10 years, millions of people have received live-saving AIDS drugs because patents have expired. But if USTR succeeds in establishing new, more restrictive patent standards, that trend could stop, hindering efforts to close the still formidable global HIV treatment gap. "This is about the White House protecting
these companies, like Pfizer, Merck, Abbott and Bristol-Myers Squibb,"
says KEI's Love. "It's going to mean that either the
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