You are here
- Home
- Media
- Press releases
- 2000
ASTRAZENECA RECEIVES FURTHER JUDGEMENT IN AUSTRALIAN OMEPRAZOLE PATENT DISPUTE
- Reference code :
- wf347
- Published date :
-
09 October 2000
- Expired date :
-
25 February 2028
AstraZeneca today announced that it will seek special leave to appeal against a judgement delivered in the Full Federal Court of Australia in Sydney in a dispute with the generic pharmaceutical company, Alphapharm Pty Limited, about the formulation patent for omeprazole - the substance used in Losec® , a treatment for acid-related disorders, such as peptic ulcers.
The Court determined that AstraZeneca's formulation patent was obvious and lacked inventive step. The court has not yet determined Alphapharm's counter-appeal on infringement and other validity issues on which AstraZeneca was successful at first instance.
"We will seek to appeal against this judgement since we are confident that the patent is not obvious and has sufficient inventive step" said Dr.Martin Nicklasson, Executive Vice President and Head of AstraZeneca's Gastrointestinal Franchise.
The substance patent for Losec® began expiring in the first countries last year (1999). The substance patent expired in Australia on April 11, 1999. Sales of Losec® in Australia in 1999 amounted to approximately USD 100m, which is under 2 per cent of the total sales of the product.
In most countries AstraZeneca has been granted Patent Term Extensions or Supplementary Patent Certificates (SPCs). This extended coverage for the patent is valid in the USA until 2001, in most European countries until 2002-2004, and in Japan until 2004. Losec® is also protected by patents directed to formulation, uses, intermediates and processes.
Further enquires to:
MediaSteve Brown +44 (0)20 7304 5033 Lucy Williams +44 (0)20 7304 5034 |
Not signed in
Page tools
Share price
- London
-
26.95 GBP - New York
-
44.82 USD - Stockholm
-
310.10 SEK
At 21-Nov-2009 06:04 GMT
Detailed share priceIntroduction to AstraZeneca
Our responsibility
We continue to communicate openly on a range of issues, including:
