Newsletter October 2009
Volume 13, Issue No. 4
Table Of Contents
  - Since our last issue…
 
  - Comings and Goings
 
  - News from the Chairman
 
  - The Board’s legislative framework
 
  - Hearings
 
  - NPDUIS Update
 
  - Voluntary Compliance Undertakings
 
  - New Drugs introduced since the publication of the July 2009 NEWSletter
 
  - Report on New Patented Drug – Pradax – now sold under the name Pradaxa
 
  - Summary of Board Meeting – September 17, 2009
 
  - Upcoming Events
 
Our recent key events
September 17: 
  The Board met and discussed the monitoring and evaluation of the Board´s   new Excessive Price Guidelines, which are coming into force on January   1, 2010.
September 17:
The HDAP held its quarterly teleconference.
September 23: 
  The NPDUIS Steering Committee held its quarterly teleconference.
October 5: 
  The Chairman of the Board approved a Voluntary Compliance Undertaking   (VCU) submitted by Baxter Corporation for the patented drug product   Brevibloc. Details of the VCU are available on page 4. The VCU is posted   on the PMPRB Web site under Regulatory; Voluntary Compliance Undertaking. 
October 5-7: 
The hearing on the merits in the Nicoderm matter was held. The   Hearing Panel instructed parties to file final written arguments before   the end of November.
October 13-14: 
  The Board held its hearing in the ratiopharm Inc. matter and requested   reply and rebuttal arguments, all to be filed by November 10.
October 16: 
  The Chairman of the Board approved a VCU submitted by Schering-Plough   Canada Inc. for the patented drug product Andriol 40 mg/capsule. Details   of the VCU are available on page 4. The VCU is posted on the PMPRB Web   site under Regulatory; Voluntary Compliance Undertaking.
October 21: 
The Board accepted a VCU and issued an Order in the matter of   Amgen Canada Inc. and the medicine Neulasta, bringing this hearing,   initiated with the issuance of a Notice of Hearing in March 2009, to a   conclusion. Details of the VCU are available on page 3. The Public   Record is available on the PMPRB Web site under Regulatory; Hearings; Neulasta.
October 27-28: 
  The Federal Court of Canada (FC) heard the Application for Judicial   Review on the Board´s decision in the matter of Teva Neuroscience and   the medicine Copaxone. The FC decision is pending.
October 28: 
  Barbara Ouellet participated in a roundtable discussion – Denmark and   Canada Healthcare Systems – organized by the Danish Embassy.
October 28-29:
Board Staff held outreach sessions with patentees, in Montreal   and Toronto, on the upcoming application of the Board´s new Excessive   Price Guidelines on January 1, 2010. The new revised Guidelines are   available on the PMPRB Web site under Legislation, Regulations and Guidelines; Compendium of Policies, Guidelines and Procedures – June 9, 2009.
Over the last quarter, Marielle Racicot joined the Corporate Services Branch. Welcome!
Our best wishes of success go to Nelson Millar who left the PMPRB in August to take on new challenges at Health Canada. 
The   Board is looking forward to the implementation of its recently revised   Excessive Price Guidelines on January 1, 2010. This will mark the   conclusion of a long consultation process with all stakeholders.
In initiating its review of the Guidelines in the 2005, the Boardfs   main objective was to ensure that the Guidelines were relevant and   appropriate in the context of an ever evolving pharmaceutical   environment. The revised Guidelines will provide greater transparency   and predictability in the price review process. To ensure that the   Guidelines remain relevant, Board Staff will be monitoring and   evaluating the application and impact of the changes to the Excessive   Price Guidelines on an ongoing basis.
As part of its ongoing work to assist patentees in preparing for the   implementation of the revised Guidelines, Board Staff held further   outreach sessions, in Montreal on October 28 and in Toronto on October   29. Board Staff remains available to provide patentees, and all   stakeholders, with guidance on all aspects of the new Guidelines.
Again, I take this opportunity to thank all who have participated in   the Guidelines review. Your insights and feedback have been invaluable   in this process.
The Board draws its authority from the Patent Act (Act) as last amended in 1993. More specifically, the pharmaceutical provisions of the Act are found in sections 79 to 103.
The Act and the Patented Medicines Regulations stipulate the   Board´s mandate and the patentees´ filing and reporting obligations   along with the pricing factors, which the Board applies in its price   review process.
Pursuant to the general powers provision of the Act, section 96, the   Board may, with the approval of the Governor in Council, make general   rules for, among other things, regulating the hearing practice and   procedure of the Board. Subsection 96(2) gives the Board the optional   power to make rules for matters such as, for example, how many days   notice must be given for a motion, how many copies of documents are to   be filed, and so on. Although the Board has not yet had its Rules   promulgated, they are nonetheless operative in that each hearing panel   may adopt them implicitly as the rules that will govern the proceeding.
Furthermore, the Board ensures that its hearings are conducted according to principles of natural justice.
The general powers of the Act also provide that the Board may issue   guidelines with respect to any matter within its jurisdiction, under   subsection 96(4). The Board´s Guidelines are not subject to approval by   the Governor in Council. Moreover, subsection 96(5) requires that the   Board, prior to issuing Guidelines, shall consult with the Minister, the   provincial ministers of health, consumer groups and representatives of   the pharmaceutical industry. As evidenced in the last few years, the   Board has extensively consulted with stakeholders on the review of the   Excessive Price Guidelines, prior to their implementation on January 1,   2010.
The Patent Act, the Patented Medicines Regulations, the   Board´s draft Rules of practice and procedure for hearings, along with   the Board´s Excessive Price Guidelines (Compendium of Policies,   Guidelines and Procedures), are all available on the PMPRB Web site   under Legislation, Regulations and Guidelines.
The PMPRB´s regulatory mandate is to ensure that   patentees´ prices of patented medicines sold in Canada are not   excessive. In the event that the price of a patented medicine appears to   be excessive, the Board can hold a public hearing and, if it finds that   the price is excessive, it may issue an Order for the reduction of the   price and the offsetting of revenues received by the patentee as a   result of excessive prices. The Board´s decisions are subject to   judicial review in the Federal Court (FC).
 
Amgen Canada Inc. and the medicine Neulasta
On October 21, 2009, the Board issued an Order accepting a Voluntary   Compliance Undertaking (VCU) for the medicine Neulasta and concluding   the proceeding initiated with the issuance of a Notice of Hearing on   March 16, 2009.
The Notice of Hearing pertained to allegations of Board Staff that   Neulasta had been, and was being, sold by Amgen Canada Inc. at prices   exceeding those indicated by the Board´s Excessive Price Guidelines. On   October 13, 2009, the Hearing Panel received a Joint Submission by Amgen   and Board Staff along with a VCU which proposed to resolve the issues   raised in the Neulasta proceedings.
The terms of the VCU require that Amgen reduce the price at which it   sells Neulasta to the 2009 maximum price; make a payment to the   Government of Canada in the amount of $6,730,120.32 to offset any   revenues above the maximum prices from the date of introduction of   Neulasta to June 30, 2009; and, offset revenues greater than the 2009   maximum price received by Amgen from July 1, 2009 to December 31, 2009.
Amgen is to ensure that the price of Neulasta remains within the   Board´s Excessive Price Guidelines for the period it remains under the   Board´s jurisdiction.
The Board Order is a public document and is available on the PMPRB   Web site, along with the parties´ Joint Submission and the VCU (under Regulatory; Hearings; Neulasta, and under Voluntary Compliance Undertakings).
Neulasta is a new active substance (pegfilgrastim)   indicated to decrease the incidence of infection, as manifested by   febrile neutropenia, in patients with cancer receiving myelosuppressive   chemotherapy.
 
ratiopharm Inc. and the medicine ratio-Salbutamol HFA
On July 8, 9 and 10, the Hearing Panel heard the parties on Board   Staff´s Motions: to add GlaxoSmithKline Inc. (GSK) as a party to the   hearing on the merits; and for the issuance of an Inspection and   Production Order to ratiopharm.
On August 14, 2009, the Panel issued a subpoena to GSK requiring the   production of the information sought by Board Staff and inspection and   production orders to ratiopharm.
A pre-hearing conference is scheduled for November 2 and the hearing on the merits is set to start on January 25, 2010.
ratio-Salbutamol HFA is indicated for the relief of   chest tightness and wheezing caused by spasms or narrowing in the small   air passages of the lungs.
 
ratiopharm Inc.
The Hearing Panel in the ratiopharm Inc. jurisdiction matter heard   the parties on October 13 and 14, 2009. At the conclusion of the hearing   session, the Panel requested that Board Staff and the Respondent file   written final reply and rebuttal arguments respectively, for the Panel´s   consideration, all by November 10, 2009.
The National Prescription Drug Utilization Information   System (NPDUIS) is a research initiative by the PMPRB in partnership   with the Canadian Institute for Health Information (CIHI). NPDUIS seeks   to provide policy-makers with information and insights on trends in   prices, utilization and costs of interest to participating public drug   plans (all federal and provincial drug plans participate in NPDUIS   except Québec).
 
The NPDUIS Steering Committee is holding a meeting in Ottawa on   November 3, conjointly with a meeting of the Canadian Institute for   Health Information´s NPDUIS Data Advisory Group on November 2, and a   meeting of the Pharmaceutical Policy Research Collaboration (PPRC) on   November 4. The PPRC is a network of academic researchers with funding   provided by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research.
Additional information on NPDUIS is available on the PMPRB Web site, under Reporting; NPDUIS.
 
A Voluntary Compliance Undertaking (VCU) is a written   undertaking by a patentee to adjust its price to conform to the Board´s   Excessive Price Guidelines (Guidelines). Under the Compliance and   Enforcement Policy, patentees are given an opportunity to submit a VCU   when Board Staff concludes, following an investigation, that the price   at which the patentee sold a patented drug product sold in Canada   appears to have exceeded the Guidelines. A VCU can also be submitted by a   patentee after a Notice of Hearing is issued.
 
Brevibloc, Baxter Corporation
On October 5, 2009, the Chairman of the Board accepted a VCU   submitted by Baxter Corporation for the patented drug product Brevibloc.
The terms of the VCU require that, among other things, Baxter offset   excess revenues received from January 1, 2007 to June 30, 2009 by making   payments totalling $212,440.76 to customers that previously purchased   Brevibloc.
Baxter is to ensure that the price of Brevibloc remains within the   Guidelines in all future periods in which Brevibloc remains under the   PMPRB´s jurisdiction.
Brevibloc (esmolol hydrochloride) is indicated for the   perioperative management of tachycardia and hypertension in patients in   whom there is a concern for compromised myocardial oxygen balance and   who, in the judgment of the physician, are clearly at risk of developing   hemodynamically-induced myocardial ischemia, and for the rapid control   of ventricular rate in patients with atrial fibrillation or atrial   flutter in acute situations when the use of a short-acting agent is   desirable.
 
Andriol, Schering-Plough Canada Inc.
On October 16, 2009, the Chairman of the Board accepted a VCU   submitted by Schering-Plough Canada Inc. for the patented drug product   Andriol 40 mg/capsule.
The terms of the VCU require that Schering-Plough offset excess   revenues of $3,392,652,63. Schering-Plough will, among other things,   offset excess revenues received from November 1, 2004 to December 31,   2004, by making a payment to the government of Canada totalling   $348,605.86. Schering-Plough is also to provide a discount of 21.25%   against the 2009 maximum non-excessive (MNE) price to all customers and   will file evidence with Board Staff that the discount to all customers   is in place in a manner consistent with the terms of the VCU.
Schering-Plough is to ensure that the price of Andriol remains within   the Guidelines in all future periods in which it remains under the   PMPRB´s jurisdiction.
Andriol (testosterone undecanoate) is indicated for the   replacement therapy in males in conditions associated with symptoms of   deficiency or absence of endogenous testosterone: for the management of   congenital or acquired primary hypogonadism and hypogonadotropic   hypogonadism; to develop and maintain secondary sexual characteristics   in males with testosterone deficiency; to stimulate puberty in carefully   selected males with clearly delayed puberty not secondary to a   pathological disorder. Andriol is used as a replacement therapy in   impotence or for male climacteric symptoms when the conditions are due   to a measured or documented androgen deficiency.
 
Sixteen   new DINs for human use (representing 11 medicines) were added to the   list of Patented Medicines reported to the PMPRB between July 30 and   September 30, 2009. Six of these new medicines are new active substances   representing 9 DINs.
The following table presents the new active substances reported to the PMPRB during the period July to September 2009.
  
    
      | Brand Name  | 
      Generic Name | 
      Company  | 
      Indication | 
    
    
      | Alrex – 2 mg/mL | 
      loteprednol etabonate | 
      Bauch and Lomb Canada Inc. | 
      Allergic conjunctivitis | 
    
    
      | Cimzia – 200 mg/mL | 
      certolizumab pegol | 
      UCB Canada Inc. | 
      Rheumatoid arthritis | 
    
    
      | Lotemax – 5 mg/mL | 
      loteprednol etabonate | 
      Bauch and Lomb Canada Inc. | 
      Inflammation from cataract surgery | 
    
    
      | Somatuline Autogel – 60 mg/syringe, 90 mg/syringe | 
      lanreotide acetate | 
      Tercica Inc. | 
      Antigrowth | 
    
    
      | Sprycel – 20 mg/tablet, 50 mg/tablet, 70 mg/tablet | 
      dasatinib | 
      Bristol-Myers Squibb Canada Inc. | 
      Leukemia | 
    
    
      | Xeomin – 100 unit/vial | 
      Clostridium botulinum neurotoxin Type A | 
      Merz Pharma Canada Ltd. | 
      Muscle relaxant | 
    
  
New patented drug products come under the PMPRB´s   jurisdiction once they are both patented and sold in Canada. If a   patented drug product was first sold during the patent pending period   (after the date when the patent was laid open for public inspection and   before patent grant), the PMPRB´s policy is to review the price of the   product back to the date of first sale.
 
Under its transparency initiative, the PMPRB publishes   the results of the reviews of new patented drug products by Board Staff,   for purposes of applying the Board´s Excessive Price Guidelines   (Guidelines) for all new active substances introduced in Canada after   January 1, 2002.
 
Brand Name: Pradax – now sold under the name Pradaxa
Generic Name: (dabigatran etexilate)
DINs: 02312433 (75 mg capsule)
  02312441 (110 mg capsule)
Patentee: Boehringer Ingelheim Canada Ltd.
Indication – as per product monograph: For the   prevention of venous thromboembolic events (VTE) in patients who have   undergone elective total hip replacement or total knee replacement   surgery.
Date of Issuance of First Patent(s) Pertaining to the Medicine: October 3, 2006
Notice of Compliance: June 10, 2008
Date of First Sale: July 3, 2008
ATC Class: B01AE07
  Blood and Blood Forming Organs; Antithrombotic Agents; Antithrombotic Agents; Direct thrombin inhibitors
Application of the Guidelines
Summary
The introductory prices of Pradax were found to be within the   Guidelines because the cost of therapy did not exceed the cost of   therapy of existing drug products in thetherapeutic class comparison and   did not exceed the range of prices of the same drug product in the   comparator countries listed in the Patented Medicines Regulations (Regulations) in which Pradax was sold.
Scientific Review
Pradax is a new active substance and the PMPRB´s Human Drug Advisory   Panel (HDAP) recommended that Pradax be classified as a category 3 new   medicine (provides moderate, little or no therapeutic advantage over   comparable existing drug products).
The Therapeutic Class Comparison (TCC) test of the Guidelines   provides that the price of a category 3 new drug product cannot exceed   the prices of other drugs that treat the same disease or condition.   Comparators are generally selected from among existing drug products in   the same 4th level of the World Health Organization (WHO)   Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical (ATC) classification system and are   clinically equivalent in addressing the approved indication. See the   PMPRB's Compendium of Guidelines, Policies and Procedures for a more complete description of the Guidelines and the policies on TCCs.
The HDAP recommended products outside the 4th level ATC as   they were no comparators in the same 4th level ATC. The HDAP   recommended fondaparinux and the low molecular weight heparins (LMWH)   (dalteparin, enoxaparin, nadroparin and tinzaparin) as appropriate   comparators to Pradax. These agents have the same indication as Pradax.   Acenocoumarol, warfarin, acetylsalicylic acid, warfarin and   unfractionated heparin were excluded as comparable products because,   based on published guidelines and randomized controlled trials, these   agents are not as effective and are associated with increased side   effects including more stringent laboratory and clinical monitoring.
The Guidelines provide that the dosage recommended for comparison   purposes will normally not be higher than the maximum of the usual   recommended dosage. The recommended comparable dosage regimens for   Pradax and the comparable drug products were based on the respective   product monographs and supported by clinical literature.
Price Review
Under the Guidelines, the introductory price of a category 3 new drug   product will be presumed to be excessive if it exceeds the prices of   all of the comparable drug products based on the TCC test or if it   exceeds the range of prices of the same drug product sold in the seven   countries listed in the Regulations.
The introductory price of Pradax 110 mg tablet was within the   Guidelines as the cost per treatment did not exceed the cost per   treatment of the comparable drug products as shown in the table below.
Introductory Period (January to June 2007)
  
    
      | Brand Name (Generic Name) | 
      Strength | 
      Dosage Regimen (30 Days)  | 
      Unit Price | 
      Cost per Treatment (30 Days) | 
    
    
      | Pradax (dabigatran etexilate) | 
      110 mg/cap | 
      60 capsules | 
      $3.92501 | 
      $235.5000 | 
    
    
      | Arixtra (fondaparinux) | 
      2.5 mg/0.5mL | 
      15 mL | 
      $30.15222 | 
      $452.2830 | 
    
    
      | Fragmin (dalteparin) | 
      10,000 antiXa IU/mL | 
      15 mL | 
      $15.60002 | 
      $234.0000 | 
    
    
      | Fragmin (dalteparin) | 
      25,000 antiXa IU/mL | 
      6 mL | 
      $39.00002 | 
      $234.0000 | 
    
    
      | Fragmin (dalteparin) | 
      5,000 antiXa IU/mL | 
      6 mL | 
      $49.14002 | 
      $294.8400 | 
    
    
      | Fraxiparine (nadroparin) | 
      5,700 antiXa IU/0.6mL | 
      18 mL | 
      $15.10003 | 
      $271.8000 | 
    
    
      | Innohep (tinzaparin) | 
      20,000 antiXa IU/mL | 
      5.25 mL | 
      $32.00002 | 
      $168.0000 | 
    
    
      | Lovenox (enoxaparin) | 
      100 mg/mL | 
      36 mL | 
      $20.50002 | 
      $738.0000 | 
    
    
      | Lovenox (enoxaparin) | 
      30 mg/0.3 mL | 
      36 mL | 
      $20.63332 | 
      $742.7988 | 
    
  
Sources:
  1 Publicly available price as per the Patented Medicines Regulations
  2 Ontario Drug Benefit Formulary, June 2008
3 Association québécoise des pharmaciens propriétaires, 2008
Due to the titration dosing, a Reasonable Relationship test was   conducted for Pradax 75 mg. The introductory price of Pradax 75 mg   capsule ($3.9250) was withinthe Guidelines.
In 2008, Pradax was being sold in two countries listed in the   Regulations, namely, Sweden and the United Kingdom. In compliance with   the Guidelines, the prices of Pradax in Canada did not exceed the range   of prices of the same drug product in those countries.
The publication of Summary Reports is part of the PMPRB´s commitment to make its price review process more transparent. 
        Where comparators and dosage regimens are referred to in   the Summary Reports, they have been selected by the HDAP for the purpose   of carrying out the PMPRB´s regulatory mandate, which is to review the   prices of patented drug products sold in Canada to ensure that such   prices are not excessive. 
        The PMPRB reserves the right to exclude from the   therapeutic class comparison list any drug product if it has reason to   believe it is being sold at an excessive price. 
        In its Summary Reports, the PMPRB will also refer to the   publicly available prices of comparators provided such prices are not   more than 10% above a non-excessive price in which case no price will be   made available. As a result, the publication of these prices is for   information purposes only and should not be relied upon as indicating   the public prices are considered within the Guidelines. 
        The information contained in the PMPRB´s Summary Reports   should not be relied upon for any purpose other than that stated and is   not to be interpreted as an endorsement, recommendation or approval of   any drug product, nor is it intended to be relied upon as a substitute   for seeking appropriate advice from a qualified health care   practitioner.
 
The   Board met on September 17, 2009, to discuss the monitoring and   evaluation of the Board´s new Excessive Price Guidelines which are   coming into effect on January 1, 2010. 
For additional information, please contact the Director,   Board Secretariat and Communications, at: 1 877 861-2350, or (613)   954-8299, or at sylvie.dupont@pmprb-cepmb.gc.ca.  
        
        Summaries of Board meetings are available on the PMPRB Web site under About PMPRB.
 
November
November 2: Pre-hearing conference in the ratiopharm Inc. and the medicine ratio-Salbutamol HFA matter, Ottawa
November 2-4: DIA´s 7th Canadian Annual Meeting: “Time to Act”, Ottawa
November 3: PMPRB NPDUIS Steering Committee meeting, Ottawa
November 3-4: Meeting of the Pharmaceutical Policy Research Collaboration (PPRC), Ottawa
November 4-5: 8th Annual Market Access Summit, Toronto
November 10-11: Market Access Canada for Pharma, Toronto
November 12: PMPRB meeting with Rx&D´s Sub-Committee on the PMPRB, on the Board´s new Excessive Price Guidelines
November 19: HDAP meeting
November 24: Presentation on the PMPRB price review   process and the Board´s new Excessive Price Guidelines, to Bristol-Myers   Squibb, Montreal
November 24-25: Brogan Advanced Seminars, Montreal, Toronto
December
December 1: Federal Court of Appeal hearing on the Celgene Corporation matter, Ottawa
December 4: Board meeting
2010 – January
January 25-28: Hearing in the ratiopharm Inc. and the ratio-Salbutamol HFA matter, Ottawa
March
March 23-26: Pharma Pricing & Market Access Outlook 2010, London, UK
Questions and Comments
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