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On 8 September 2016 the General Court (GC) handed down its judgments in relation to the appeals brought by Lundbeck and a number of generic companies (Sun Pharma (Ranbaxy), Arrow, Generics UK, Merck and Xellia/Alpharma) against a European Commission (Commission) decision finding that the parties had breached Article 101 TFEU by agreeing to delay the market entry of generic citalopram. The GC fully upheld the Commission decision and the fines imposed on the parties (see judgments in Cases T472/13, T470/13, T469/13, T467/13, T460/13 and T471/13).
The GC confirmed the Commission's finding that Lundbeck and the generics were potential competitors at the time the agreements at issue were concluded as, absent the agreements, the generics would have had "real concrete possibilities of entering the market" including by "launching at risk".
The GC also found that the Commission had been correct to conclude that the agreements at issue constituted restrictions of competition "by object", as they affected potential competition by transforming the uncertainty as to whether Lundbeck's patents would have enabled it to block generic entry into the certainty that the generics would not enter the market by means of very significant reverse payments. According to the GC, Lundbeck did not demonstrate that the restrictions set out in the agreements at issue were "objectively necessary" in order to protect its IP rights. Lundbeck could have protected its rights by bringing legal proceedings or it could settle the patent dispute without imposing restrictions on generic entry. Finally the GC noted that there were no efficiencies benefiting consumers.
This is a seminal case as it is the first time the GC has dealt with such so-called "payfordelay" agreements. The GC has fully upheld the Commission's decision and approach and this is likely to encourage the Commission and national competition authorities (NCAs) to pursue more "payfordelay" cases in the future. The Commission continues its annual monitoring of patent settlements between originators and generics in order to identify settlements which could be problematic from an antitrust perspective. "Payfordelay" agreements remain very much in the spotlight and pharma companies are thus advised to consider carefully the terms of their settlement agreements relating to market entry.
In June 2013 the Commission fined Lundbeck €93.8 million and several producers of generic medicines a total of €52.2 million for delaying the market entry of citalopram, Lundbeck's blockbuster antidepressant medicine. According to the Commission, after Lundbeck's basic patent for the citalopram molecule had expired, it only held a number of related process patents which provided a more limited protection; generic producers of citalopram had the possibility to enter the market in a variety of ways. Instead of competing with each other, the Commission found that Lundbeck and the generics entered into a series of patent settlement agreements under which the generics agreed to delay their market entry in exchange for financial compensation (a so-called "reverse payment" or "value transfer"). In its assessment of the Lundbeck agreements, the Commission took into account the following factors:
The Commission concluded that the agreements in question did not resolve or terminate any patent dispute and the parties did not agree on any entry date for the generic company, but rather agreed on a period during which the generic company would be excluded from the market, without any guarantee of unrestricted market entry thereafter, in exchange for a considerable sum of money from Lundbeck. As such the Commission held the agreements were market sharing agreements which constitute a violation of competition "by object", i.e. they were by their very nature injurious to the proper functioning of normal competition. It was therefore not necessary for the Commission to establish that the agreements had anticompetitive
effects.
All parties involved in the agreements appealed the Commission's decision arguing that the Commission committed a number of errors in law and in the assessment of the facts. The main grounds of appeal related to the Commission's finding that Lundbeck and the other parties to the agreements were actual or potential competitors under Article 101 TFEU and its findings that the patent settlement agreements restricted competition "by object" under Article 101 TFEU.
The GC dismissed the appeals brought by Lundbeck and the generics and confirmed the fines imposed by the Commission. The key findings of the GC in relation to the two main grounds of appeal are set out below.
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All in all, the key concept appears to be whether the agreements eliminate potential competition in a situation where the generics have "real and concrete possibilities of entering the market" (including by launching at risk) by removing the uncertainty of whether the patents would have enabled the patent holder to block generic entry by means of significant reverse payments.
The Commission welcomed in a press release the GC judgment which "fully confirmed [its] findings" (see here).
On the other hand, Lundbeck said in a statement that it "strongly disagrees" with the GC judgment and that its agreements "did not go beyond the protection already offered by society via Lundbeck's patent rights". Both Lundbeck and the generics are likely to appeal the judgments at the CJEU.
It should be noted that the GC's approach is arguably different from the US position in relation to "pay-for-delay" agreements, as the Supreme Court ruled in FTC v Actavis that such agreements do not constitute per se restrictions of competition and should instead be assessed under the "rule of reason". Even though in the EU an efficiency analysis is possible also for agreements that restrict competition "by object", it is in principle almost impossible to reverse the presumption that such agreements harm competition by pointing to efficiencies. Indeed, the GC pointed out that the agreements in question had no redeeming features and did not benefit consumers (patients and national health departments).
Patent settlement agreements between originators and generics came under the spotlight during the Commission's sector inquiry in the pharmaceutical sector in 2008-2009. Since then, the Commission has been monitoring patent settlements annually in order to identify settlements which could be potentially problematic from an antitrust perspective. Its latest monitoring report was published in December 2015 (see here).
Following its decision in Lundbeck, the Commission adopted decisions in two other "pay-for-delay" cases (see our previous bulletin here). In particular, in December 2013 the Commission fined Johnson & Johnson and Novartis a total of €16.3 million finding that they agreed to delay the sale of Novartis' generic version of Johnson & Johnson's painkiller fentanyl in the Netherlands under the guise of a "co-promotion agreement". In July 2014, the Commission imposed fines totalling €427.7 million on Servier and five generic companies for concluding a series of deals aimed at protecting Servier's blockbuster drug perindopril from price competition by generics in the EU. The Servier decision is currently on appeal before the GC. Further, the Commission has at least one ongoing investigation (opened in 2011) which involves a settlement agreement between Cephalon and Teva which delayed the generic entry of modafinil.
In the UK, the CMA imposed fines totalling £44.99 million on GlaxoSmithKline plc (GSK) and a number of generic companies for having entered into pay-for-delay patent settlement agreements. GSK agreed to make payments and other value transfers of £50 million in total to the suppliers of generic versions of its drug paroxetine, in order to delay the entry of generic competition on the UK market. The CMA's decision is also currently on appeal before the Competition Appeal Tribunal.
It is clear that "pay-for-delay" agreements remain a "hot topic" in the EU. The Commission and the NCAs remain vigilant in this area and the GC judgment is likely to encourage them to pursue more "pay-for-delay" cases in the future.
Managing Partner, Competition Regulation and Trade, Brussels
The contents of this publication are for reference purposes only and may not be current as at the date of accessing this publication. They do not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Specific legal advice about your specific circumstances should always be sought separately before taking any action based on this publication.
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