The Daily - Why One Drug Company Held Back a Better Drug
Episode Date: September 7, 2023For decades, drugmakers have argued that patents are critical to bringing new drugs to the market. But in 2004, when a promising H.I.V. treatment emerged, Gilead Sciences decided to slow-walk its rele...ase to maximize profit on the company’s existing patents.Rebecca Robbins, who covers the pharmaceutical industry for The Times, discusses one man’s case and how patents can create perverse incentives to delay new and better drugs.Guest: Rebecca Robbins, a business reporter covering the pharmaceutical industry for The New York Times.Background reading: Gilead delayed a new version of a drug, allowing it to extend the patent life of a blockbuster line of medications, internal documents showed.In August, an expert panel recommended the new daily pill Descovy for H.I.V. prevention.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.
Transcript
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From The New York Times, I'm Sabrina Tavernisi, and this is The Daily.
For decades, drug companies have argued that patents are critical to bringing new drugs to market.
to market. Today, my colleague Rebecca Robbins on a case that suggests they can also create perverse incentives to hold new drugs back. It's Thursday, September 7th.
So Rebecca, you report on the pharmaceutical industry, and you've been reporting on a case involving a big-name American drug company.
Tell me about that reporting.
Yeah, Sabrina.
So, we all know that prices are really high for many drugs in the United States.
And in some respects, that is by design.
in the United States. And in some respects, that is by design. So the way the system works is we rely on for-profit companies to spend a lot of money to develop and bring to market new drugs.
And in return for spending that money, for taking all those risks, they get to have a monopoly that
lasts for years. And that allows them to sell their medications for lots of money and keep
those prices high. And there are actually laws
and regulations that protect that monopoly. And part of the rationale for this system is that the
promise of these profits creates incentives for the company to produce new and better drugs to
help more people. But recently, my colleague Cheryl Geistelberg and I came across a case that I think
raises serious questions about whether the system is always getting the best medications to patients
as quickly as possible. And where does that story start? So I want to start with the story of a
patient named David Swisher. Hi, Rebecca. How are you? I'm good. Thank you so much for your... So today, David is a 66-year-old retiree. He's living in Florida after retiring from a long career in the airline industry that took him all over the country for different jobs. And so back in 1997...
I was living in Texas, south of Houston, and I just turned 40.
David started feeling ill.
And it was very intense.
I mean, it was like, you're aching from head to toe.
I kept going into the emergency room for a week, telling him, I feel bad, something's
wrong, I have the flu.
After the third time I went in there, really, really not feeling good, someone was smart
enough to send me upstairs and say, let's do a workover on this guy, see what's going on.
And finally, after two nights in the hospital, one of the young interns, she came in and she just says, well, we figured out what's wrong with you.
It turned out that he had HIV.
What was going through your head at that moment?
That I was going to drop dead.
And when he got his diagnosis,
his mind immediately turned to his worst fears.
I'd lived through all that epidemic from,
I lived in San Francisco from 1978 until 1984.
And it just got so gloomy and dark. He had a huge number of friends that he lost.
It was a really, really painful time. Like 80% of my friends had died in a six-year period,
and all of them were under 30. They'd call me on Friday and say, David, I parked my car,
you know, in a bad spot, and I left the keys in your desk. Can I parked my car, you know, in a bad spot and I left the keys
in your desk. Can you move my car so I can, you know, it doesn't get towed away?
And then bring it up to me in the hospital on Monday. Okay, so no problem. I would go
move their vehicle, go up on Sunday night to see them and find out they were dead.
find out they were dead. So when David got his HIV diagnosis in the mid-1990s, he thought it was a death sentence. But it turns out it wasn't. And that's because by that point, drug companies
were making huge strides in treating HIV with powerful new medications. But the first versions of these drugs had some really tough
side effects. They were really challenging for patients to take. In my mind, I'm thinking,
that's fine. I'll be alive. I'd much rather be alive than the option, which wasn't good.
But I was allowed to go back to work, and I was pretty much, you know, I'd lost some weight.
I didn't look really healthy, but I was able to regain the weight and continue.
Over time, the medications became easier to take, fewer side effects, more convenient.
I went from a cocktail of a bunch of pills to one pill a day.
to one pill a day. And in 2004, a drug company called Gilead released a drug called Truvada.
You may have heard of it. Today, it's used for both preventing HIV and treating it.
I remember it was a big deal when it came out.
Exactly. It was a huge deal. And that's because it was really effective. Many patients had less severe side effects on Truvada, and it was more convenient to take. It really became a game-changer in the
fight against AIDS. And the key ingredient in Truvada is a version of something called
tenofovir. It prevents the HIV virus from replicating. This doctor said to me, he says,
well, you're doing well on the three medications you're on, but the drug rep has really been pushing this, touting it really as the
miracle medication. It's all about convenience. It's one pill. All you got to do is take one pill.
So I started taking the Truvada. That's where it started.
Truvada, that's where it started.
So David did well on this pill for a while,
but then something started to change for him.
He felt different.
I would say between 2006 and 2011,
it had gotten progressively worse.
Just really achy, like achy inside my bones.
And just really like someone to kind of beat me up, you know, just achy all over.
And so after a long time trying to figure out what was going on, David's primary care doctor had an idea.
He suggested ordering a scan of David's bones.
Okay, so we did it. And so I sat there and he came in and he says,
well, it's like bones of a 90-year-old woman.
I've never seen anyone at your age have such severe osteoporosis.
So at this point, you're a man who's 62 being told you have the bones of a 90-year-old.
How did it feel to hear that?
Frightening. All that the primary care said was, it's quite possible that it's toxicity from
some of the medications that you may be taking.
The conclusion he and his doctors came to was that even though Truvada was treating David's HIV and keeping him alive, it also appeared to be the most likely cause of the side effects, the weakness in his bones and also some kidney issues he was experiencing.
So what does he do?
Well, fortunately for David, in 2016, Gilead released a new HIV drug.
This new drug contained a newer version of tenofovir. Again, that's the active ingredient
in Truvada, the medication that appeared to be making David sick. But this new formulation of
tenofovir was different. The tweak in the formulation of tenofovir turned out to be a big
deal. It ended up meaning that the medication didn't carry the same side effects that David
had been experiencing. So David switched over to Gilead's newer version of the drug, and his health
began to improve. But David had spent years suffering from side effects he attributes to
Truvada. He even took an early
retirement because he felt he wasn't able to work anymore. So he wanted to know what exactly
had gone wrong with Truvada. So I googled kidney decline and severe osteoporosis.
David did some googling, and he came across an advertisement from lawyers who were looking for patients, patients who had experienced side effects like the ones he had.
These lawyers were suing Gilead, and David was eligible to join the lawsuits.
And I thought about it, you know, really reluctantly.
I had never sued anybody, so I was thinking, first of all, I wouldn't really know how to go about it.
seeing anybody. So I was thinking, first of all, I wouldn't really know how to go about it.
And is that something that I wanted to get into, you know, or did I just want to let the medicines do their work? David was reluctant at first to reach out to these lawyers. He was taking the
new drug. It seemed to be working much better for him. But it just really got me mad. But he was
also angry that Truvada, this drug he'd taken for years and years,
appeared to have hurt him so much.
And he was also angry at Gilead.
So David ultimately decided to join the lawsuits.
He became one of some 26,000 patients
who are suing Gilead.
And what are they arguing in the lawsuit?
Like, on what grounds are they suing Gilead?
Lawyers for these patients have put together a number of claims. They're arguing the usual
sorts of things you see in personal injury lawsuits, that Gilead was aware of the problems
and did not adequately warn patients about these potential side effects. But they're also making
a more unusual claim. They say that the newer
version of tenofovir, that's the one David eventually switched over to that didn't have
the same bone and kidney side effects, could have been made available to patients about a decade
earlier than it was. So what does that mean? There was a newer version that's better and they just
held it? That's right. They say that Gilead had been working on this newer version in the early 2000s.
They also claim that even though there was good reason at the time to think that the newer version would turn out to be safer, that it wouldn't have those same kidney and bone side effects, Gilead still decided to delay bringing it to market.
So they're arguing that the company actually had a newer version that was safer that they withheld.
But why would they do that?
Well, the theory is that it was all about maximizing profits.
Okay, so explain what you mean by that.
Well, it all goes back to this system that I was talking about,
this for-profit system of drug development.
A central part of that is patents, which protect a drug company's intellectual property.
Patents are really the lifeblood of the pharmaceutical industry.
So the way it works is when a drug company develops a product, they can and do file for lots of patents. And
together, these patents create a monopoly which lasts for years. That means other companies cannot
sell a generic version of the same drug. And so prices stay high because whichever company
controls the patents faces no competition. And what's the rationale for that? The thinking is if you were
to do all this research and spend all this money to bring a drug to market, and then immediately
your competitors could just come in and sell knockoff copies of your hard work so you couldn't
make money, well, then you wouldn't have much of an incentive to do that innovation in the first
place. And I think there's broad agreement that a lot of times that system works really well.
But critics say there are also downsides to this system.
For one, it keeps drug prices higher for longer.
And in David's case, his lawyers are arguing that the system created an incentive
for Gilead to delay bringing its innovation to the market.
That was the newer drug that would have been safer for David.
So Gilead had a monopoly on the older version of the drug. That's the one that was in the
medication that David took. And that monopoly was due to expire in 2017. So that meant that Gilead had full protection against competition
until then and could keep prices high. And the plaintiff's lawyers argue that Gilead intentionally
decided not to release the newer, potentially safer version of the drug so that it could make more money.
Okay, so the plaintiffs are saying that, you know, we've been suffering from these side effects,
which you, Gilead, knew about. And all the while, you had a new drug that didn't have those side
effects, but you didn't release it because you didn't want to effectively eat into the profit that the first drug was still bringing in.
That's right.
And what did Gilead say? And what was their response about this allegation that they
intentionally withheld the drug for profit?
So Gilead denies the allegation completely. The company acknowledges that they did delay the drug's development.
In fact, they publicly acknowledged in 2004 when they made the decision.
They put out a press release announcing that they had decided to stop developing the drug.
But the company says that had nothing to do with profit.
drug. But the company says that had nothing to do with profit. The real reason, they said at the time and they say now, is that the newer version wasn't sufficiently different from the older
version to justify moving it forward. And on its face, that's a completely reasonable reason to
not move forward with a drug. It doesn't make sense to bring to market two virtually identical
versions of the same thing. But as this lawsuit has unfolded and moved through the court system,
the lawyers for the patients who are suing have, as part of the normal discovery process,
managed to get their hands on internal company documents from around the time in the early 2000s when
Gilead executives were making decisions around the development for this newer version of the drug.
And those documents give a really rare view of what was going on behind the scenes, of what the
company executives were considering. And I think they suggest that
Gilead's version of events doesn't reflect the whole story.
We'll be right back. So, Rebecca, you told us that the plaintiffs in this case are arguing that Gilead withheld
a safer drug from the market in order to maximize their profits.
Gilead denies this.
But now the plaintiff's lawyers have their hands on all of these internal documents.
So what do we actually know about what happened here?
So the documents give us a really fascinating look inside this drug company at a time when executives were making decisions about these medications.
So let's go back to the year 2001. That was the year that the FDA approved the original version of tenofovir.
And in those early years, the evidence began to accumulate that some patients, very small fraction
of the overall number, but some patients did develop side effects, typically problems with
their bones, their kidneys, that appear to be caused, at least in part, by the older version
of tenofovir. But Gilead was not just banking on the original formulation of this drug. Like
companies typically do, Gilead scientists were tinkering in the lab with other very similar compounds.
The idea was that if you make small changes, tinker with molecules, you might find some dramatically improved drug or learn something important or have a backup in case the product that was being prioritized didn't pan out.
Okay.
And one of those molecules stood out.
Pretty quickly, the company's scientists identified this newer version as having potential in its own right. Maybe it should be developed on its own merits as a new
potential blockbuster in the drug company's pipeline. And I assume this is the version of
the drug that the lawsuit talks about, right? So what was so exciting about this new
version? Yeah, so early studies conducted in animals and in the laboratory indicated that
this new formulation was much better than the original version at delivering tenofovir to the
cells in the body it was targeting. And that meant that way less of it was leaking into the bloodstream
where it would travel to kidneys and bones and
cause this toxicity. And the early studies showed also that it could be given at a lower dose.
Now, it's important to say the Gilead scientists did not have definitive proof at this point that
the newer formulation of the drug was safer in humans. You would have to run bigger clinical
trials to know for sure. But there was some pretty
strong early evidence that this was promising. That was echoed in an internal memo from 2002
that said the newer version, quote, may translate into a better side effect profile and less drug
related toxicity, end quote. That's huge, right? I mean, that would mean that this new formulation was likely
not to cause those awful side effects we heard David and so many others had.
Right. So at the time, there was a lot of optimism within the company about this newer version.
It appeared to be full steam ahead with this drug. Company scientists were updating the research
community at conferences.
Executives were keeping investors abreast. The company was running projections looking at how
much money the drug could make. And in 2002, the company began the first human clinical trial of
the newer version to evaluate its safety. In that same year, you can see in the documents that a
Gilead employee mapped out a development timeline for the newer version.
And the timeline projected that the company could get the newer version to market as quickly as 2006.
So that would have been just a few years after David had started on the old version of the drug.
Exactly. But that's not what ended up happening.
Even though there had been all this excitement among Gilead's scientists about the newer version
of the drug, at some point around 2003, company executives started to sour on rushing it to market.
And Gilead did not follow through on those plans that could have brought it to market by around 2006.
Why?
So these internal documents indicate that executives started to worry that releasing the newer version of the drug would eat into the market share for the older version of the drug.
Okay.
Now, the phrase they used was cannibalize.
Okay.
Now, the phrase they used was cannibalize, as in the new drug would, quote, ultimately cannibalize, end quote, the market for the older drug.
Gilead would essentially be competing with itself.
So that's pretty explicit. That's right.
And remember, Gilead at this time knew it had a monopoly on selling the older version of the drug that would last until 2017.
So there was still a lot of runway, still a lot of time for Gilead to earn money from this franchise.
Right. This is a rare golden ticket. They want to keep it as long as it'll go.
Exactly. So instead of pushing forward on this newer version of the drug, the documents indicate that the company was formulating a plan.
It was called a patent extension strategy, and it's repeatedly referred to that way in the documents.
What the company wanted to do was find a way to maintain its monopoly, to maintain sales beyond the expiration of the monopoly on the first drug.
And the internal documents from 2003 showed that the company ultimately planned to time the release of the newer version of the drug
right when it would be optimal to switch patients over from the older drug.
This is right before the patent was expiring.
over from the older drug.
This is right before the patent was expiring.
One memo says the development of the newer version,
quote, is timed such that it is launched in 2015, end quote.
Now to step back, you know, a drug like that isn't going to take 12 years to develop.
So this is a business analyst at the company
proposing delaying the release of the
newer version. And so in 2004, Gilead halted the development of the newer version of the drug.
Okay, so to recap, these documents suggest that company executives didn't want to squander any of this
precious patent. They wanted to be able to keep prices high for as long as possible to maximize
profits. And so they halted the development of a new, potentially better drug, which is really
the opposite of what the whole patent system is meant to do. That's the allegation. Now, the documents
don't explicitly say that the reason for halting development was because the company was following
any sort of strategy to try to maximize profits. But the documents do provide context around the
business considerations Gilead was thinking about at the time. And the plaintiffs say that
the way the chronology ultimately played out, the way things ended up unfolding, validates their
accusation. What we know is that the newer version of the drug sat on a shelf for years, despite
those early signs that it might turn out to be safer for some patients.
Gilead kept selling the older version.
It became a blockbuster, bringing in billions of dollars and keeping millions of patients alive.
And then in 2010, Gilead decided to resurrect the newer version of the drug.
They did the clinical trials, they went through the regulatory process,
and they released it in 2015. So they followed through on their plan to extend the patent,
the one they talked about in the documents. It appears that way. Now, Gilead said this had
nothing to do with following through on any sort of patent extension strategy. They said the reason
they changed their mind about whether the newer
drug made sense to move forward with is that the situation for patients had changed by then.
One consideration was that long-term HIV survivors were getting older. They were more susceptible to
bone and kidney problems, and it made sense to have a safer option for them.
And when the newer version came out, Gilead positioned it as just as effective as Truvada,
but gentler on the bones and kidneys. In other words, it doesn't have the same side effects David suffered from. So when the patent on the older version expired in 2017 and drug makers offering generic versions were able to come in with their own products,
the price of Truvada ultimately went way down from about $22,000 a year to under $400 a year.
But Gilead successfully switched a lot of patients from the older version to the newer
version. And those patients are still exposed to the higher price. That's a sticker price of
$26,000 a year. And the switch to the newer version was really, really successful. Today,
Gilead drugs containing the newer version account for half the market for HIV treatment and prevention.
And it makes sense that people switched over, right? Because this new version of the drug has fewer side effects.
Well, it's a little more complicated, actually.
The newer version doesn't have the old side effects, but it does have its own side effects.
It can cause weight gain and elevated cholesterol levels in some patients.
So I think the reality is that the older version is safer for some patients,
and the newer version is safer for other patients.
But the lawyers in David's case say that if both versions of the drug had been
available on the market, at least patients and their doctors would have had the option to choose
which version would best suit their needs based on those risks. So you might switch patients who
were experiencing kidney and bone issues over to the newer version.
Okay, so whatever the motive, what happened in the end was that the company did make enormous
profits because the release of the new drug ended up being perfectly timed, right? So how common is
this? Like, is this a strategy that you see a lot in the pharmaceutical industry?
So under the current system, there are a ton of complicated ways that companies essentially
extend their monopolies and maximize their profits. So the phenomenon that we saw play
out with Gilead's versions of tenofovir is called product hopping. And that's because
you're hopping patients from the older version of the drug over to the newer version of the drug just before the patent for the older drug runs out.
But there are other common strategies, too.
One is called patent thickening.
Patent thickening?
That's right.
The idea here is to file so many patents on all sorts of things, the dosage, the delivery method, even things like a safety program to ensure that
the drug is safely distributed. And the idea is to make it as hard as possible for generic
competitors to find their way through, like a thicket. It's hard to navigate a thicket.
Like an actual thicket of patents.
That's right. The idea is that it's so costly, so time consuming for a smaller
company to wade through that thicket of patents that they might give up. They might decide it's
too risky that they would face lawsuit or not be able to keep the product on the market.
And companies do all sorts of things to try to fight off generic competition. They'll reach deals with generic competitors to minimize the impact of generic competition or sometimes sue them, claiming that companies are infringing on their patents.
So these strategies you're describing, they don't seem to have that much to do with creating new treatments. They seem more
about using pretty powerful legal and financial muscles to flood the zone in a way that blocks
competition. But in the case of Gilead and Tenofovir, that meant not just blocking another
company from entering the market, but actually hitting pause on developing a new drug, their own drug, that could be less harmful.
That feels ethically squishy.
That's right. There are definitely legal questions here, but there's also an ethical question.
Oftentimes when you see product hopping, there's not a ton of consequence about when the newer version is released. Oftentimes, it's even criticized for being
a tiny tweak, something that isn't important, something that doesn't improve outcomes,
doesn't improve quality of life for patients. But I think what's distinctive about this case
is the allegation that the timing of the release of the newer version of the drug resulted in harm to patients.
The stakes here had an impact for patients' health.
Not only for their pocketbooks.
Right. And I think that's one of the questions that's going to be addressed
as the courts decide whether or not these lawsuits can move forward.
But it seems like the argument, both in court but also ethically,
rests on whether Gilead, way back in the early 2000s,
actually knew that this newer drug would come out ahead when weighing the pros and cons.
They had reason to believe it might turn out to be gentler on the bones and kidneys,
but it was still really early days in the research.
So you could, at the time, reasonably conclude that the signal just wasn't strong enough for
Gilead to have an ethical imperative to put the drug on a fast track. Yeah, that's really the
question, isn't it? How much evidence was enough evidence for Gilead to have a responsibility to
move the drug forward? So what kind of impact could a decision in this case have?
So Gilead's lawyers say in legal filings that this could set a dangerous precedent,
this argument that the plaintiff's lawyers are making. They are saying that if any company can be held liable for not releasing a product on a specific timetable,
that could jeopardize innovation. And the concern here is that if drug companies could be sued for
not releasing products immediately, then they would be less likely to take the risk,
spend huge amounts of money to run clinical trials if
they could get in trouble if they didn't get the timing just right. Right. I mean, when you think
about it, it is kind of strange, like a court ordering a company to release its product before
it wants to. Exactly. For instance, you probably wouldn't see Apple being held liable for not releasing its latest iPhone quickly enough.
And I think there's precedent in past cases suggesting Gilead has a pretty strong defense here.
You know, when these sorts of patent strategies are challenged in court, drug companies often end up winning.
On the other hand, this isn't an iPhone. It's a drug, right? Kind of
different category. Right. The critics here of Gilead say that drugs can't be treated like other
products, that it's a matter of life and death, not just a question of when people get the newest
version of the iPhone. So is there a way to change the incentives for companies?
Well, one avenue is cases like David's, which could set a precedent for better or for worse,
depending on your perspective. We'll see how that plays out in the courts. But as for policy
changes, federal lawmakers regularly introduce bills that aim to crack down on various aspects
of patent gaming.
But those haven't gained much traction so far. And there are lots of reasons for that. The industry lobbies hard against regulation. But another consideration is that policymakers are worried
about interfering with the system that we have set up. The system that, in a lot of cases,
has been extraordinarily successful at producing breakthrough therapies.
And I think this is what is so hard about regulating the pharmaceutical industry.
We want to strike a balance between the benefits the system brings and the ways that it can sometimes harm patients.
You know, we don't want to create incentives that discourage companies
from coming up with breakthrough therapies.
We want to create the space
where companies will take the risks
to bring the next Truvada to market.
But we also don't want to have a system
where companies prioritize profits over patients,
where safer medications get delayed for business reasons
and patients suffer.
We want to discourage companies from gaming the system.
Rebecca, thank you.
Thank you.
We'll be right back.
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collapse of a plea deal between Biden and federal prosecutors in July.
Today's episode was produced by Eric Kropke and Will Reed. It was edited by Liz O'Balin and Paige Cowett. Fact-checked by Nicole Pasalka and Susan Lee. Contains original music by Rowan Nemisto, Dan Powell,
Alicia Baitube,
and Marian Lozano.
And was engineered
by Alyssa Moxley.
Our theme music
is by Jim Brunberg
and Ben Landsberg
of Wonderly.
Special thanks
to Cheryl Stolberg.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Sabrina Tavernisi.
See you tomorrow.