U.S. Supreme Court rules in favor of generic drug patents
The U.S. Supreme Court, in a unanimous decision on Thursday, ruled that a cardiovascular drugmaker did not violate America’s patent laws. The ruling could allow for generic drug manufacturers to produce more without fear of patent lawsuits.
Justices on the high court ruled in favor of Hikma Pharmaceuticals in a case over whether it infringed on Amarin Pharma’s cardiovascular medication, Vascepa. The justices said Hikma Pharmaceuticals did not infringe on Amarin’s patent.
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson said Hikma should be allowed to proceed its production of the generic drug since it got approval from the Food And Drug Adminstration. Advocates for generic drugs argued the process allows for patients to obtain necessary medication at lower prices.
“We decline to put generic manufacturers between a rock and a hard place by turning adherence to the law and industry standards into building blocks for illegal conduct,” Jackson wrote.
Lawyers for Amarin Pharma argued that sales from Hikma Pharmaceuticals harmed its own business practices. Justices on the high court said these arguments were unsubstantiated and could not properly be included in this particular patent lawsuit.
“For Amarin’s speculation to bear out, a medical provider would have to look up and read the press releases, which were directed to investors rather than doctors and pharmacists; have enough background knowledge of pharmaceutical sales to understand the quoted sales figures,” Jackson wrote.
Latest News Stories
U.S. population growth slows after Trump border policies enacted
Maryland joins mid-decade redistricting fight
Democrats call for Noem’s removal after second fatal shooting by DHS agent
Illinois cannabis industry cautious on child-safety bill, questions focus on regulated products
87 indicted in TdA, Colombian, Venezuelan ATM jackpotting scheme in Nebraska
States, caregivers can now view key metrics for state child welfare systems
More Illinois Catholic schools close; candidates call for change
U.S. effort to limit China’s influence reaches Latin America
Govt. shutdown risk spikes as Senate Democrats vow to tank funding package
Report: EU regulations cost billions for American tech companies
Acting ICE director ordered to court by Minnesota federal judge
Crackdown in Minneapolis underway following Trump talks with Walz, Frey