India has revoked a patent granted to GlaxoSmithKline for its breast cancer drug Tykerb, a decision that follows a landmark India court ruling disallowing patents for incremental innovations that was a blow to global pharmaceutical giants.

However, India’s Intellectual Property Appellate Board (IPAB) upheld a patent granted on the original compound, or active pharmaceutical ingredient, lapatinib, citing innovative merit. Tykerb is the salt form of lapatinib sold in India.

India’s Supreme Court in April rejected a patent for Novartis AG’s cancer drug Glivec, saying it was an amended version of a known molecule called imatinib, setting the precedent for more such cases in the country.

India’s latest move is a blow for GSK, which had cut prices of Tykerb by a third in the country as part of a flexible pricing prog­ramme designed to make key drugs more affordable in certain emerging markets.

Western drugmakers who covet a bigger share of India’s fast-growing $13 billion drugs market have been frustrated by a series of decisions on intellectual property and pricing.

Last year, India revoked patents granted to Pfizer Inc’s cancer drug Sutent, Roche Holding AG’ hepatitis C drug Pegasys, and Merck & Co.’s asthma treatment aerosol suspension formulation. All were revoked on grounds that included lack of innovation. Fresenius Kabi Oncology, the Indian unit of German healthcare group Fresenius SE, had challenged patents granted for both the original molecule and its marketed version Tykerb, saying both molecules lacked innovation.

“This decision is just like the landmark Glivec ruling. The IPAB has said that the salt version of lapatinib cannot hold a patent,” said lawyer Dominic Alvares of S. Majumdar & Co., which re-presented Fresenius Kabi in the case.

Shares in GlaxoSmithKline Pharma­ceuticals, the UK company’s Indian unit, were down 2.4 per cent yesterday.

The company can appeal the decision to India’s Supreme Court.

“We are studying the IPAB’s decision but maintain our belief in the inventiveness of the lapatinib ditosylate salt and will consider the possibility of taking further steps before the appropriate authorities to validate this,” the Indian unit of UK-based GSK said in an e-mail to Reuters yesterday. (Reuters)

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