India rejects compulsory license application for Sprycel
This article was originally published in Scrip
Executive Summary
India has rejected BDR Pharmaceuticals' application for a compulsory license (CL) for Bristol-Myers Squibb's anticancer, Sprycel (dasatinib), after the Indian firm failed to make a prima facie case for such a request.
You may also be interested in...
India IPR Realities: Pharma, Legal Heads Discuss Winds Of Change, ‘Damocles Sword’
Leaders from Novartis, Bayer, Sun Pharma, the Indian Pharmaceutical Alliance, Médecins Sans Frontières and Anand and Anand discuss India’s evolving intellectual property rights landscape, including pre-grant oppositions, enforcement action and other realities. Concerns around evergreening, restrictions on patent-eligible subject matter and compulsory licensing were also key talking points at a recent conference in Hyderabad.
India IPR Wheels Are Turning: Novartis, Bayer, Sun, Legal Heads Discuss Realities
Leaders from Novartis, Bayer, Sun Pharma, the Indian Pharmaceutical Alliance, Médecins Sans Frontières and Anand and Anand discuss India’s evolving intellectual property rights landscape, including pre-grant oppositions, enforcement action and other realities. Concerns around evergreening, restrictions on patent-eligible subject matter and compulsory licensing were also key talking points at a recent conference in Hyderabad.
India IPR Realities: Pharma, Legal Heads Discuss Winds Of Change, ‘Damocles Sword’
Leaders from Novartis, Bayer, Sun Pharma, the Indian Pharmaceutical Alliance, Médecins Sans Frontières and Anand and Anand discuss India’s evolving intellectual property rights landscape, including pre-grant oppositions, enforcement action and other realities. Concerns around evergreening, restrictions on patent-eligible subject matter and compulsory licensing were also key talking points at a recent conference in Hyderabad.