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A07245 Summary:

BILL NOA07245A
 
SAME ASSAME AS S04370-B
 
SPONSORGottfried
 
COSPNSRMcDonald, Frontus, Barron, Englebright, Perry, Rivera JD, Griffin, Davila, Burdick, Simon, Sillitti, Barnwell, Epstein, Rosenthal L, Wallace, Lupardo, Gonzalez-Rojas, Paulin, Galef, Thiele, Abinanti, Bichotte Hermelyn, Steck, Solages, Stirpe, Smith, Reyes, Niou, Forrest, Lavine, Jean-Pierre, Jackson, Gunther, Hevesi, Dinowitz, Quart, Mamdani, Glick, Fernandez
 
MLTSPNSR
 
Add Art 2-A Title IV §§282 & 283, Pub Health L
 
Relates to preserving access to affordable drugs; provides that an agreement resolving or settling, on a final or interim basis, a patent infringement claim, in connection with the sale of a pharmaceutical product, shall be presumed to have anticompetitive effects if a nonreference drug filer receives anything of value from another company asserting patent infringement and if the nonreference drug filer agrees to limit or forego research, development, manufacturing, marketing, or sales of the nonreference drug filer's product for any period of time.
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A07245 Text:



 
                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
 
                                         7245--A
 
                               2021-2022 Regular Sessions
 
                   IN ASSEMBLY
 
                                     April 29, 2021
                                       ___________
 
        Introduced  by  M.  of  A.  GOTTFRIED,  McDONALD,  FRONTUS, ENGLEBRIGHT,
          J. D. RIVERA, GRIFFIN, DAVILA,  BURDICK,  SIMON,  SILLITTI,  BARNWELL,
          EPSTEIN,   L. ROSENTHAL,  WALLACE,  LUPARDO,  GONZALEZ-ROJAS,  PAULIN,
          GALEF, THIELE, ABINANTI, BICHOTTE HERMELYN,  STECK,  SOLAGES,  STIRPE,
          SMITH,  REYES,  NIOU,  FORREST, LAVINE, JEAN-PIERRE, JACKSON, GUNTHER,
          HEVESI, DINOWITZ, QUART, MAMDANI -- read  once  and  referred  to  the
          Committee  on  Health  --  recommitted  to  the Committee on Health in
          accordance with Assembly Rule 3, sec. 2 -- committee discharged,  bill
          amended,  ordered reprinted as amended and recommitted to said commit-
          tee
 
        AN ACT to amend the public health law, in relation to preserving  access
          to affordable drugs
 
          The  People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:
 
     1    Section 1. Article 2-A of the public health law is amended by adding a
     2  new title IV to read as follows:
     3                                  TITLE IV
     4                    PRESERVING ACCESS TO AFFORDABLE DRUGS
     5  Section 282. Definitions.
     6          283. Preserving access to affordable drugs.
     7    § 282. Definitions. For the purposes  of  this  title,  the  following
     8  terms shall have the following meanings:
     9    1.  "ANDA" shall mean abbreviated new drug application as described by
    10  505(j) of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, 21 U.S.C. 335(j).
    11    2. "ANDA filer" shall mean a party that owns or controls an ANDA filed
    12  with the federal food and  drug  administration  or  has  the  exclusive
    13  rights under that ANDA to distribute the ANDA product.
    14    3.  "Agreement" shall mean anything that would constitute an agreement
    15  under state law.
    16    4. "Agreement resolving  or  settling  a  patent  infringement  claim"
    17  includes  any  agreement  that is entered into within thirty days of the

         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD04644-05-2

        A. 7245--A                          2
 
     1  resolution or the settlement of the claim, or any other  agreement  that
     2  is contingent upon, provides a contingent condition for, or is otherwise
     3  related  to  the  resolution  or  settlement  of  the  claim. This shall
     4  include, but is not limited to, the following:
     5    (a) Any agreement required to be provided to the federal trade commis-
     6  sion  or  the  antitrust  division  of  the  United States Department of
     7  Justice under the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement,  and  Modern-
     8  ization Act of 2003, Pub. L. No. 108-173;
     9    (b)  Any  agreement  between  a  biosimilar or interchangeable product
    10  applicant and a reference product  sponsor  under  the  Biologics  Price
    11  Competition  and  Innovation  Act  of  2009,  Pub.  L. No. 111-148, that
    12  resolves patent claims between the applicant and sponsor.
    13    5. "Biosimilar biological product  application  filer"  shall  mean  a
    14  party  that owns or controls a biosimilar biological product application
    15  filed with the federal food and drug administration pursuant to  section
    16  351(k) of the Public Health Service Act, 42 U.S.C. 262(k), for licensure
    17  of  a  biological  product  as biosimilar to, or interchangeable with, a
    18  reference product, or that has the exclusive rights under  the  applica-
    19  tion to distribute the biosimilar biological product.
    20    6. "NDA" shall mean a new drug application.
    21    7. "Nonreference drug filer" shall mean either:
    22    (a) An ANDA filer;
    23    (b)  A company that seeks an abbreviated approval pathway for its drug
    24  product under 505(b)(2) of the Federal Food, Drug, and  Cosmetic Act, 21
    25  U.S.C. 355(b)(2); or
    26    (c) A biosimilar biological  product  application  filer,  or  company
    27  seeking FDA approval for a biosimilar under 42 U.S.C. 262.
    28    8.  "Nonreference  drug product" shall mean the product to be manufac-
    29  tured under an ANDA or an application filed under section  505(b)(2)  of
    30  the  Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, 21 U.S.C. 355(b), that is the
    31  subject of the patent infringement claim, a biosimilar biological  prod-
    32  uct  that is the product to be manufactured under the biosimilar biolog-
    33  ical product application that is the subject of the patent  infringement
    34  claim, or both.
    35    9.  "Patent  infringement" shall mean infringement of any patent or of
    36  any filed patent application,  extension,  reissue,  renewal,  division,
    37  continuation,  continuation in part, reexamination, patent term restora-
    38  tion, patents of addition, and extensions thereof.
    39    10. "Patent infringement claim" shall mean any allegation  made  to  a
    40  nonreference  drug  filer,  whether or not included in a complaint filed
    41  with a court of law, that its nonreference drug product  or  application
    42  infringes  any patent held by, or exclusively licensed to, the reference
    43  drug holder.
    44    11. "Reference drug holder" shall mean either:
    45    (a) A brand holder that is any of the following:
    46    (i) The holder of an approved NDA for a drug product application filed
    47  under section 505(b) of the Federal Food, Drug,  and  Cosmetic  Act,  21
    48  U.S.C. 355(b);
    49    (ii)  A  person owning or controlling enforcement of the patent listed
    50  in the approved drug products with therapeutic  equivalence  evaluations
    51  in connection with the NDA; or
    52    (iii)  The  predecessors,  subsidiaries, divisions, groups, and affil-
    53  iates controlled by, controlling, or under common control with,  any  of
    54  the  entities  described  in subparagraph (i) or (ii) of this paragraph,
    55  with control to be presumed by direct or  indirect  share  ownership  of

        A. 7245--A                          3
 
     1  fifty  percent  or greater, as well as the licensees, licensors, succes-
     2  sors, and assigns of each of those entities; or
     3    (b)  A  biological product license holder, which shall mean any of the
     4  following:
     5    (i) The holder of an approved biological product  license  application
     6  for  a biological drug product under section 351(a) of the Public Health
     7  Service Act, 42 U.S.C. 262(a);
     8    (ii) A person owning or controlling enforcement of  any  patents  that
     9  claim the biological product that is the subject of the approved biolog-
    10  ical patent license application; or
    11    (iii)  The  predecessors,  subsidiaries, divisions, groups, and affil-
    12  iates controlled by, controlling, or under common control with,  any  of
    13  the  entities  described  in subparagraph (i) or (ii) of this paragraph,
    14  with control to be presumed by direct or  indirect  share  ownership  of
    15  fifty  percent  or greater, as well as the licensees, licensors, succes-
    16  sors, and assigns of each of those entities.
    17    12. "Reference drug product" shall mean the product to be manufactured
    18  by the reference drug holder and includes both branded drugs of the  NDA
    19  holder  and  the  biologic  drug product of the biologic product license
    20  applicant.
    21    13. "Statutory exclusivity"  shall  mean  those  prohibitions  on  the
    22  approval of drug applications under clauses (ii) through (iv) of section
    23  505(c)(3)(E), section 527 or section 505A of the Federal Food, Drug, and
    24  Cosmetic  Act,  21  U.S.C.  355(c)(3)(E), on the licensing of biological
    25  product applications under section 262(k)(7) of Title 42 of  the  United
    26  States Code or section 262(m)(2) or (3) of Title 42 of the United States
    27  Code.
    28    §  283.  Preserving  access  to  affordable  drugs.  1.  (a) Except as
    29  provided in paragraph (c) of this subdivision, an agreement resolving or
    30  settling, on a final or interim basis, a patent infringement  claim,  in
    31  connection  with the sale of a pharmaceutical product, shall be presumed
    32  to have anticompetitive effects and shall be a violation of this section
    33  if both of the following apply:
    34    (i) A nonreference drug filer receives anything of value from  another
    35  company asserting patent infringement, including, but not limited to, an
    36  exclusive license or a promise that the brand company will not launch an
    37  authorized generic version of its brand drug; and
    38    (ii)  The  nonreference drug filer agrees to limit or forego research,
    39  development, manufacturing, marketing, or sales of the nonreference drug
    40  filer's product for any period of time.
    41    (b) As used in subparagraph (i) of paragraph (a) of this  subdivision,
    42  "anything  of value" shall be interpreted broadly to include any type of
    43  consideration, value or benefit a reference drug holder or  nonreference
    44  drug filer could possibly obtain from the agreement. "Anything of value"
    45  shall  not  include  a settlement of patent infringement claims in which
    46  the consideration granted by the reference drug holder to the  nonrefer-
    47  ence drug filer as part of the resolution or settlement consists of only
    48  one or more of the following:
    49    (i)  The  right  to  market the competing product in the United States
    50  before the expiration of either:
    51    (A) A patent that is the basis for the patent infringement claim; or
    52    (B) A patent right or other statutory exclusivity that  would  prevent
    53  the marketing of the drug;
    54    (ii) A covenant not to sue on a claim that the nonreference drug prod-
    55  uct infringes a United States patent;

        A. 7245--A                          4
 
     1    (iii)  Compensation for saved reasonable future litigation expenses of
     2  the reference drug holder but only if both of the following are true:
     3    (A)  The total compensation for saved litigation expenses is reflected
     4  in budgets that the reference drug  holder  documented  and  adopted  at
     5  least six months before the settlement; and
     6    (B) The compensation shall not exceed the lower of the following:
     7    (1) Seven million five hundred thousand dollars; or
     8    (2)  Five  percent  of  the  revenue  that the nonreference drug filer
     9  projected or forecasted it would receive in the  first  three  years  of
    10  sales  of  its  version of the reference drug documented at least twelve
    11  months before the settlement. If no projections or forecasts are  avail-
    12  able,  the  compensation  shall  not  exceed  two hundred fifty thousand
    13  dollars;
    14    (iv) An agreement by the reference drug holder not to  interfere  with
    15  the  nonreference drug filer's ability to secure and maintain regulatory
    16  approval to market the nonreference drug  product  or  an  agreement  to
    17  facilitate  the nonreference drug filer's ability to secure and maintain
    18  regulatory approval to market the nonreference drug product; or
    19    (v) An agreement resolving a patent infringement claim  in  which  the
    20  reference  drug  holder  forgives  the  potential  damages  accrued by a
    21  nonreference drug filer for an at-risk launch of the  nonreference  drug
    22  product that is the subject of that claim.
    23    (c)  Parties  to an agreement are not in violation of paragraph (a) of
    24  this subdivision  if  they  can  demonstrate  by  clear  and  convincing
    25  evidence that either of the following are met:
    26    (i)  The  value  received  by the nonreference drug filer described in
    27  subparagraph (i) of paragraph (a) of this  subdivision  is  a  fair  and
    28  reasonable  compensation  solely  for  other  goods or services that the
    29  nonreference drug filer has promised to provide; or
    30    (ii) The agreement has directly generated procompetitive benefits  and
    31  the  procompetitive  benefits  of the agreement outweigh the anticompet-
    32  itive effects of the agreement.
    33    2. In determining whether the parties to the agreement have met  their
    34  burden  under  paragraph (c) of subdivision one of this section, a court
    35  of competent jurisdiction shall not consider any of the following:
    36    (a) That entry into the marketplace could not have occurred until  the
    37  expiration  of  the  relevant patent exclusivity or that the agreement's
    38  provision for entry of the nonreference drug product before the  expira-
    39  tion  of  any  patent exclusivity means that the agreement is procompet-
    40  itive within the meaning of subparagraph (ii) of paragraph (c) of subdi-
    41  vision one of this section;
    42    (b) That any patent is enforceable and infringed by  the  nonreference
    43  drug  filer  in the absence of a final adjudication binding on the filer
    44  of those issues;
    45    (c) That the agreement caused no delay in entry  of  the  nonreference
    46  drug  filer's  drug product because of the lack of Federal Food and Drug
    47  Administration (FDA) approval of that or of  another  nonreference  drug
    48  product; or
    49    (d)  That the agreement caused no harm or delay due to the possibility
    50  that the nonreference drug filer's  drug  product  might  infringe  some
    51  patent that has not been asserted against the nonreference drug filer or
    52  that is not subject to a final and binding adjudication on that filer as
    53  to the patent's scope, enforceability, and infringement.
    54    3.  In determining whether the parties to the agreement have met their
    55  burden under paragraph (c) of subdivision one of this section,  a  court
    56  of competent jurisdiction shall presume that the relevant product market

        A. 7245--A                          5
 
     1  is  that market consisting of the reference drug of the company alleging
     2  patent infringement and the drug product of the nonreference drug  filer
     3  accused  of  infringement  and  any  other  biological  product  that is
     4  licensed  as biosimilar or is an AB-rated generic to the reference prod-
     5  uct.
     6    4. (a) This section shall not modify, impair, limit, or supersede  the
     7  applicability  of  the  antitrust  laws of the state pursuant to article
     8  twenty-two of the general business law, unfair competition laws  of  the
     9  state  pursuant  to  article twenty-two-A of the general business law or
    10  the availability of damages or remedies provided therein.  This  section
    11  shall  not  modify,  impair,  limit,  or supersede the right of any drug
    12  company applicant to assert claims or counterclaims against any  person,
    13  under the antitrust laws or other laws relating to unfair competition of
    14  the federal antitrust law or state law.
    15    (b)  If  any  provision of this subdivision, an amendment made to this
    16  subdivision, or the application of any provision  or  amendment  to  any
    17  person  or circumstance is held to be unconstitutional, the remainder of
    18  this subdivision, the amendments  made  to  this  subdivision,  and  the
    19  application  of  the provisions of this subdivision or amendments to any
    20  person or circumstance shall not be affected.
    21    5. (a)(i) Each person that violates or assists  in  the  violation  of
    22  this  section  shall forfeit and pay to the state a civil penalty suffi-
    23  cient to deter violations of this section, as follows:
    24    (A) If the person who violated this section received any value due  to
    25  that  violation,  an  amount up to three times the value received by the
    26  party that is reasonably attributable to the violation of this  section,
    27  or twenty million dollars, whichever is greater; or
    28    (B) If the violator has not received anything of value as described in
    29  this  subparagraph, an amount up to three times the value given to other
    30  parties to the agreement reasonably attributable  to  the  violation  of
    31  this section, or twenty million dollars.
    32    (C)  For purposes of this subdivision, "reasonably attributable to the
    33  violation" shall be determined by the state's share of  the  market  for
    34  the brand drug at issue in the agreement.
    35    (ii) Any penalty described in subparagraph (i) of this paragraph shall
    36  accrue  only  to  the  state  and  shall  be recovered in a civil action
    37  brought by the attorney general in its own name, or by any of its attor-
    38  neys designated by it for that purpose, against any party to  an  agree-
    39  ment that violates this section.
    40    (b)  Each  party  that  violates  or  assists in the violation of this
    41  section shall be liable for any damages, penalties, costs, fees, injunc-
    42  tions, or other equitable or legal remedies, including, but not  limited
    43  to, restitution and disgorgement, that may be just and reasonable.  Such
    44  remedies  shall  include,  but  not  be limited to, any remedy available
    45  under articles twenty-two or twenty-two-A of the  general  business  law
    46  and section sixty-three of the executive law.
    47    (c)  If the state is awarded penalties under subparagraph (i) of para-
    48  graph (a) of this subdivision, it shall not recover  penalties  pursuant
    49  to  another  law  identified  in paragraph (b) of this subdivision. This
    50  section shall not be construed to foreclose the state's ability to claim
    51  any equitable or legal remedy available in paragraph (b) of this  subdi-
    52  vision.
    53    (d)  An  action  to  enforce a cause of action for a violation of this
    54  section shall be commenced within six years after the  cause  of  action
    55  accrued.

        A. 7245--A                          6
 
     1    § 2. Severability clause. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivi-
     2  sion,  section  or  part  of  this act shall be adjudged by any court of
     3  competent jurisdiction to be invalid  or  unenforceable,  such  judgment
     4  shall not affect, impair, or invalidate the remainder thereof, but shall
     5  be  confined in its operation to the clause, sentence, paragraph, subdi-
     6  vision, section or part thereof directly involved in the controversy  in
     7  which  such  judgment shall have been rendered. It is hereby declared to
     8  be the intent of the legislature that this act would have  been  enacted
     9  even if such invalid provisions had not been included herein.
    10    §  3.  This  act  shall take effect on the sixtieth day after it shall
    11  have become a law.
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