The USPTO has rejected four patents of Gilead Sciences on a key HIV drug Tenofovir, which ultimately strengthens the pre-grant opposition filed in 2006 by Indian Network for People Living with HIV/AIDS to several patent applications filed by Gilead on tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) in India, on the ground that they did not meet the country's patentability standards.
TDF is important for people suffering with AIDS as a first line treatment, and also for those who have developed resistance to first-line antiretroviral therapy. WHO treatment guidelines include TDF in first and second-line antiretroviral regimens.
For the domestic generic industry, the development encourages production of the drug in the country, and gives them opportunities to export to developing countries to provide affordable treatment for millions of people suffering from AIDS.
With this rejection, Gilead Sciences faces an uphill task to get a patent in