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HIV patient group—Delhi Network of Positive People (DNP+)—has filed a post-grant opposition against Swiss major Roche’s patent for its HIV drug Valganciclovir at the Chennai Patent office. The Chennai patent office granted the patent to Roche last year without hearing the arguments of the two NGOs which had filed pre-grant opposition against the drug, a DNP+ release said. The NGO has opposed the patent on the grounds that Valganciclovir is a known compound, and at most, a ‘new form’ of an already known substance with no improvement in efficacy. DNP+ has also alleged that many patents granted by the Chennai patent office were rejected in the US, which is considered to be far more liberal than Indian patent laws. Valganciclovir is used to treat cytomegalovirus, a virus that causes irreversible blindness and also attacks other parts of the human body, such as the gastro-intestinal system and brain, causing death. According to the release, Roche which also holds the patent for the drug in other countries charges as much as $10,000 for a four-month supply of oral Valganciclovir. In India, the price for a full course of treatment is over Rs 2,70,000. As a patent holder, Roche will have the exclusive marketing right for the drug for 20 years. Patient groups say that such a high cost of the drug is preventing lakhs of HIV patients from getting treatment or substituting it with painful intravenous or injections drugs. India has around 2.5 million HIV patients. “Thousands of people are unnecessarily losing their vision and their livelihoods simply because the treatment is too expensive,” said DNP+ president Loon Gangte. By Ms.Bobby Aanand, Metropolitan Jury.
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