PUNE: They may seem as different as chalk and cheese but 20-year-old Rucha Joshi has made a delicious discovery - she makes biscuits from banana peels.
According to Rucha, her invention holds exclusivity as she herself has reviewed literature at the CFTRI from 1865 to 2007. Except for a jam made in European countries, so far, she has not come across any other product made from banana peels.
Bhagwat V Patil, president of the Banana Growers’ Association of India said that he had not come across any such product before. “My visit literally proved ‘fruitful’, and I decided to find out if one could make biscuits out of banana peel pulp,” she says. With encouragement from her family, she started work. She prepared three varieties of biscuits, one without banana peel pulp, the other with 10 per cent banana peel pulp and the third with 20 per banana peel pulp.
After conducting an analysis of the biscuits, she found that as she increased the amount of pulp, the calories in the biscuits decreased, while the fibre increased. Furthermore, after doing a fungal analysis, it was found that they had a good shelf life.
While she presented the first research paper on low-calorie biscuits from BPP in 2002, she kept improvising on the same. As a result, her paper was selected the fourth best in
A third-year biotech engineering student at KIT college in
Sunday, December 30, 2007
Girl peels biscuits from bananas
Monday, December 17, 2007
New Move For an Indian Patent Database
Two years after
IP law blog ("blawg") Spicy IP has sent a petition to the India Patent Office (IPO). Citing India’s status as an information technology leader and its emerging role as a patent “trendsetter” for the developing world, the petition calls on the IPO to “create a comprehensive database” of patents, including full specifications and claims. It also asked that the IPO to “upload patent office decisions,” which are currently confidential, in order to foster transparency and public accountability.
Eli Lilly withdraws Forteo patent claim in Kolkata
Mumbai:
Eli Lilly’s application for a crystalline form of the drug teriparatide has been withdrawn by the applicant under section 11B (4) of the Indian Patent Act last fortnight, according the patent office. Teriparatide is the generic name of Forteo. The company has already launched this product in
In August, after hearings on a pre-grant opposition filed by USV that lasted a year, the Kolkata patent office had rejected Eli Lilly’s first patent application, on grounds of prior knowledge, incremental innovation and failure to establish enhancement of known efficacy. Forteo is the only biotech drug—medicines that are developed from living forms—available in
However, at least two companies, including USV, are now expected to launch the generic version of this drug in the local market soon.
Eli Lilly’s decision to withdraw its patent application in
Indian patent rules do not permit patent protection for drugs here if it has been patented elsewhere before 1995, and its claims of innovation are only incremental, under the provisions of Section 25(1)(b) and Section 3(e) of the Indian Patents Act. The drug also cannot be patented if its efficacy is not significantly superior to an already known molecule under Section 3(d) of the law.
India rebuffs Lilly patent claim on Cialis
Regulators in
The drug's basic components were synthesized in 1970 by Indian scientists at a government body that researches pharmaceuticals, the Central Drug Research Institute, an Indian drugmaker contended. Moreover, drugmaker Ajanta Pharma argued, the Indian scientists obtained a
If Lilly's appeal of the decision fails, Cialis will compete with less-expensive forms of the drug in one of the world's largest markets. Lilly's predicament was the subject of an article in the Business Standard, an Indian business newspaper.
The newspaper said 72 other countries have accepted that the drug, whose generic name is tadalafil, is novel.
Wednesday, December 12, 2007
Sanofi Sues Glenmark Alleging Hypertension Drug Patent Violated
A unit of Sanofi-Aventis SA,
Sanofi-Aventis Germany said in a complaint filed Dec. 7 in federal court in
Monday, December 10, 2007
Pfizer first MNC to get HIV drug patent in India
Global drug major Pfizer's new HIV/AIDS drug Celzentry (generic name: Maraviroc) has become the first known HIV/AIDS treatment drug to get a patent in
Maraviroc, the first in a new class of oral HIV medicines developed in the last ten years and expected to become a major blockbuster HIV/AIDS drug globally, was granted a patent in
Discovered and developed by Pfizer scientists since 1997, Maraviroc, which works by blocking the entry of the virus into human cells, received approval from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) only in August 2007, through an accelerated regulatory approval process. One month later, the European Commission gave marketing approval for Maraviroc in
Nicholas wins patent for anti-cancer drug
New data and studies done on the compound P-276-00 would also be presented at the 49th Annual Meeting and Exposition of American Society of Hematology (ASH) which is being held at
Nicholas Piramal had also entered into a drug discovery collaboration or two cancer molecules with MSD Pharmaceuticals, the Indian arm of global drug major Merck & Company. Earlier the company had been granted a patent in
Friday, December 7, 2007
FW: GSK pulls out patent applications for 2 anti-AIDS drugs in India
GlaxosmithKline (GSK) has withdrawn the patent applications of two anti-AIDS medicines in
It is believed that the company formally withdrew the application of Abacavir, however, the other drug of the company, namely, Trizivir, is believed to be withdrawn after it made a request of not examining its case to the patent office. The company had filed the patent application in the Kolkata patent office last year.
A second-line anti-retroviral (ARV) drug, Abacavir, is used to treat patients who have developed resistance to first-line medications. Trizivir is a blend of three ARV drugs, which are used for first and second-line treatments. These drugs are however included in the list of drugs that the Centre and WHO recommend for HIV treatment.
Companies like Cipla, Ranbaxy and Hetero, etc, are already marketing one or both these drugs in the country. However, if GSK had received the patent, these companies would have had to pay a royalty to the company. As a result, this would increase the cost of HIV treatment.
It is believed that the company`s drugs were salt forms of the existing drugs and it considered to be cautious to pull out the application rather than being rejected. The company felt that a rejection could diminish its chances of getting patent in other developing countries.
Thursday, December 6, 2007
Sun settles patent row with Novartis
“Under the terms of the settlement, Sun Pharma will not market generic Exelon in the US until sometime prior to the expiration of the patents covering Exelon.
The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) had granted final approval for Sun Pharma’s generic version of Exelon, chemically known as rivastigmine tartrate, on October 22, 2007. The approval had come after the completion of the 30-month stay triggered by Novartis’ complaint for patent infringement. However, the litigation between the two companies was still ongoing. At the time of the announcement, Sun Pharma had said that the company would “evaluate all its launch options.” Sun Pharma, being one of the first to file an abbreviated new drug application to sell generic Exelon in the US, was eligible to share a 180-day marketing exclusivity on the drug. However, had Sun Pharma launched its generic version of Exelon before reaching an agreement with Novartis or the court’s ruling, it would have done so at risk of damages claim from the Swiss company. US-based Watson Pharma and India’s Dr Reddy’s Lab were also first-to-file on this product. The Hyderabad-based company has also received final approval to market rivastigmine tablets in the US on October 31st, 2007. Ranbaxy Laboratories is also seeking approval to market a generic version of Novartis’ drug in the US.