游行权利能确保获得联邦资助研究产生的医疗产品吗?定性研究。

Carolyn L. Treasure, J. Avorn, A. Kesselheim
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引用次数: 17

摘要

新处方药和其他医疗产品的高成本是一个日益严重的卫生政策问题。许多最具变革性的药物和疫苗都源于公共部门对非营利研究机构的资助。尽管1980年的Bayh-Dole法案规定了“进行权”,通过该法案,政府可以对保护由公共资金开发的产品的专利进行一定程度的控制,以确保公众获得这些药物,但这一规定对当前政策选择的适用性尚不清楚。方法:我们对Bayh-Dole法案的立法历史以及过去向美国国立卫生研究院(NIH)提交的游行权利请愿听证会进行了第一手文献审查。然后,我们对《贝-多尔法》游行权利方面的12位关键专家进行了半结构化访谈,以确定争端的来源和规约实施中的主要主题。我们使用标准的定性技术分析访谈记录。研究结果:自1980年以来,美国国立卫生研究院仅全面审查了5项请愿书,要求对4项与健康相关的技术或由联邦资助的研究开发的医疗产品援引政府的进步权。其中三项请求与降低品牌药品的高价有关,一项与缓解药品短缺有关,还有一项与可能侵犯专利的医疗设备有关。在这些案例中,NIH都拒绝了这些请求。受访者对这些经验的影响意见不一,他们认为NIH不愿实施其“入场权”,要么是该系统按预期运作的证据,要么是该系统存在缺陷需要改革的证据。结论:政策制定者和健康倡导者继续援引Bayh-Dole法案的进行权,最近在联邦资助的研究中最初发现的新型高成本产品的背景下。我们发现,进步权的存在可能会使政府研究许可方更有可能将研究成果商业化,并且可以利用进步权从被许可方那里获得较小的让步。但是,正如现行法规所规定的那样,这种“进步权”不太可能起到平衡作用,以降低由联邦政府资助的研究产生的医疗产品价格。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Do March-In Rights Ensure Access to Medical Products Arising From Federally Funded Research? A Qualitative Study.
CONTEXT The high cost of new prescription drugs and other medical products is a growing health policy issue. Many of the most transformative drugs and vaccines had their origins in public-sector funding to nonprofit research institutions. Although the Bayh-Dole Act of 1980 provides for "march-in rights" through which the government can invoke some degree of control over the patents protecting products developed from public funding to ensure public access to these medications, the applicability of this provision to current policy options is not clear. METHODS We conducted a primary-source document review of the Bayh-Dole Act's legislative history as well as of hearings of past march-in rights petitions to the National Institutes of Health (NIH). We then conducted semistructured interviews of 12 key experts in the march-in rights of the Bayh-Dole Act to identify the sources of the disputes and the main themes in the statute's implementation. We analyzed the interview transcripts using standard qualitative techniques. FINDINGS Since 1980, the NIH has fully reviewed only 5 petitions to invoke governmental march-in rights for 4 health-related technologies or medical products developed from federally funded research. Three of these requests related to reducing the high prices of brand-name drugs, one related to relieving a drug shortage, and one related to a potentially patent-infringing medical device. In each of these cases, the NIH rejected the requests. Interviewees were split on the implications of these experiences, finding the NIH's reluctance to implement its march-in rights to be evidence of either a system working as intended or of a flawed system needing reform. CONCLUSIONS The Bayh-Dole Act's march-in rights continue to be invoked by policymakers and health advocates, most recently in the context of new,high-cost products originally discovered with federally funded research. We found that the existence of march-in rights may select for government research licensees more likely to commercialize the results and that they can be used to extract minor concessions from licensees. But as currently specified in the statute, such march-in rights are unlikely to serve as a counterweight to lower the prices of medical products arising from federally funded research.
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