Thursday, September 19, 2024, 9:30 a.m. – 12:20 p.m. EDT
The Brookings Institution, Falk Auditorium, 1775 Massachusetts Ave. NW. Washington, D.C.
At the heart of U.S. drug price reduction policy is a law that is about to turn 40 years old: the Hatch-Waxman Act (HWA). The HWA, signed in September 1984, attempts to balance lower prices through generic competition with innovation incentives to brands. The law does so by lowering barriers to entry for generics and by granting various new exclusivities to the brands. The exclusivities give branded manufacturers 5-year data exclusivity for new chemical entities (NCEs) and 3-year exclusivity for NCE extensions or modifications that are supported by clinical data.
The evidence on the first 25 years following enactment of the HWA showed that many of the desired outcomes were realized. That is, significant savings were obtained from drugs that experienced patent expiration and patent terms were lengthened.
However, subsequent industry responses and market structure changes have revealed less encouraging results in more recent HWA performance. Companies began to ratchet up their use of the HWA pathways to extend exclusivity periods, including settlements of patent challenges by generic firms, the late filing of patents, the refusal to provide samples to generic firms, filing of pretextual “citizen petitions” against competitors to delay market entry, and evergreening, when companies patent existing drugs with slight modifications. As a result, the effective exclusivity for new drugs is longer than what Congress designed and can extend anywhere from 7 to 35 years.
A variety of ideas have been advanced to limit anti-competitive conduct. On September 19, the Center on Health Policy at Brookings will convene an event to examine the origins of the Act, lessons learned from the first 40 years, and considerations for the future of regulation of markets for generic drugs and competition in the pharmaceutical industry.
Viewers can join the conversation and ask questions of the speakers by emailing events@brookings.edu or on X/Twitter @BrookingsEcon using the hashtag #HatchWaxman.
The Brookings Institution, 1775 Massachusetts Ave NW, Washington, DC 20036
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