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Reported Monday June 10, 2024 "Amneal, U.S. FTC Win Order Removing Teva Inhaler Patents From FDA List" - Reuters News

Author: Benzinga Newsdesk | June 11, 2024 10:40am

https://www.reuters.com/legal/litigation/amneal-us-ftc-win-order-removing-teva-inhaler-patents-fda-list-2024-06-10/

 

Drugmaker Amneal Pharmaceuticals (AMRX.O), opens new tab with the backing of the U.S. Federal Trade Commission convinced a New Jersey federal court on Monday to remove five Teva Pharmaceutical (TEVA.TA), opens new tab patents from a U.S. Food and Drug Administration list of patents covering Teva's breathing drug ProAir HFA.

U.S. District Judge Stanley Chesler agreed with Amneal and the FTC, opens new tab that Teva's patents only covered inhaler device technology, ordering it to remove the listings from the FDA's Orange Book and clearing an obstacle for Amneal's proposed generic.

The decision follows the FTC's warnings to drugmakers including Teva over the misuse of Orange Book patent listings to wrongly extend patent monopolies on brand-name drugs. Chesler on Monday also rejected Teva's bid to dismiss Amneal's allegations that Teva violated state and federal antitrust law.

Spokespeople for Teva, Amneal and the FTC did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the decision.

Teva sued Amneal for patent infringement last year based on its proposed generic version of ProAir HFA, which treats bronchial spasms caused by diseases like asthma. Teva stopped making ProAir HFA in 2022.

Amneal counterclaimed that Teva had improperly submitted the patents to the Orange Book, which lists patents that cover drugs that the FDA has deemed safe and effective.

The FTC last year sent notices to Teva and other drugmakers disputing 110 of their Orange Book patents, and said the companies may have improperly submitted them to the FDA to delay generic competition. The commission filed a brief supporting Amneal in the New Jersey case.

Chesler agreed with Amneal and the FTC that Teva's patents only cover parts of a "metered inhaler device" and "do not claim or even mention" ProAir HFA.

The case is Teva Branded Pharmaceutical Products R&D Inc v. Amneal Pharmaceuticals of New York LLC, U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey, No. 2:23-cv-20964.

Posted In: AMRX TEVA