BEIJING, June 20 -- Twelve Chinese pharmaceutical
firms have launched an appeal against a court ruling protecting US drug giant
Pfizer's patent rights for Viagra.
In a last-ditch effort to protect their investment in
Viagra-style drugs, the firms yesterday handed their appeal to the Beijing High
People's Court.
They are calling for a reversal of the June 2 court
ruling which upheld Pfizer's patent for its anti-impotence drug.
But the State Intellectual Property Office (SIPO),
which was ordered on June 2 to withdraw its decision to invalidate the patent
right of Sildenafil Viagra's active ingredient did not appeal with the 12
companies yesterday, thereby missing the appeal deadline.
A date has not yet been set for the case, court
sources told China Daily.
On June 2, the Beijing No 1 Intermediate People's
Court ruled in favour of Pzifer, after reviewing the case for more than one and
a half years.
Yesterday, while expressing his disappointment in not
having SIPO's support in the appeal, Wang Wei, a lawyer representing the 12
pharmaceutical companies, told China Daily: "We must try our best to protect our
interests, no matter whether SIPO will appeal with us."
The 12 drug companies, from Jilin, Shanghai, Anhui,
Jiangsu, Guangdong, Chongqing, Sichuan and Tianjin, claim to have invested over
100 million yuan (US$12 million) in less expensive imitations of the famous blue
pill.
Pfizer filed a patent application in May 1994 for the
use of Sildenafil in erectile dysfunction treatment in China.
SIPO granted the patent after seven years of
examination, but the 12 Chinese companies challenged the validity of the
decision.
As a result, SIPO's patent review board invalidated
the patent in July 2004 on grounds of "insufficient disclosure" of the
invention, but the decision never took effect as Pfizer launched an immediate
legal challenge.
Pfizer's legal action against SIPO reached court in
October 2004. The case aroused widespread attention, although it was not the
only case in which the SIPO patent review board, a government entity, was in
court for its decisions on intellectual property rights.
Industry insiders pointed out that the huge potential
profits of anti-impotence drugs and dramatic clashes between domestic and
overseas pharmaceutical companies were the real causes of the dispute.
Chinese anti-impotence drugs, marketed under various
names, are intended to sell at less than 50 yuan (US$6.25) per pill much cheaper
than Viagra, which costs around 100 yuan (US$12.5) per pill in China.
It is estimated that about 80 million Chinese men
suffer from erectile dysfunction.
If Pfizer finally wins the patent dispute, the
Chinese drug producers will have had their investment completely wasted, because
they have never had the right to sell their imitations approved.
Sources with Pfizer would not comment on the appeal
yesterday.
In an earlier statement the US pharmaceutical giant
welcomed the decision to uphold its patent rights, saying it reaffirmed China's
commitment to fostering an effective patent protection environment.
The company believes the initial decision establishes
China as a viable and safe investment destination.
The appeal from the 12 Chinese pharmaceutical firms
does not provide any new evidence for their claim, but insists Viagra's patent
manual fails to provide convincing technical content.
(Source: China Daily)