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S. 1041 Senate Commerce

Affordable Prescriptions for Patients Act

Introduced
Mar 13, 2025
Sponsor
Sen. Cornyn, John (R-TX)
View on Congress.gov (opens in a new tab)

STAGE 3 OF 8 — CALENDARS AND SCHEDULING

Currently in the Senate. Last action: placed on senate legislative calendar under general orders. calendar no. 44 on Apr 10, 2025.

  1. Senate Introduced in Senate Mar 13, 2025
  2. Senate Read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary. Mar 13, 2025
  3. Senate Committee on the Judiciary. Ordered to be reported with amendments favorably. Apr 3, 2025
  4. Senate Committee on the Judiciary. Reported by Senator Grassley with amendments. Without written report. Apr 10, 2025
  5. Senate Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 44. Apr 10, 2025

Cosponsors

3

Subjects

Administrative remediesCivil actions and liabilityCompetition and antitrustConsumer affairsDrug safety, medical device, and laboratory regulationFederal Trade Commission (FTC)Health care costs and insuranceInflation and pricesIntellectual propertyJudicial review and appealsManufacturingPrescription drugs

Committees

  • Judiciary Committee
    • Reported By , Apr 10, 2025
    • Markup By , Apr 3, 2025
    • Referred To , Mar 13, 2025

Summary

Affordable Prescriptions for Patients Act

This bill limits in certain instances the number of patents that the manufacturer of a biologic drug can assert in a lawsuit against a company seeking to sell a biosimilar version of that drug. (A biologic drug is produced through natural processes or isolated from natural sources. A biosimilar version is substantially similar to the original biologic, which is the reference product, and is often marketed as a less expensive alternative.)

The bill's provisions apply to an existing framework that gives the biosimilar manufacturer an abbreviated path to Food and Drug Administration approval to sell the biosimilar. Specifically, if the biosimilar manufacturer completes certain actions under the framework, such as sharing certain information about its product with the reference product manufacturer, the bill limits the number of certain patents that the reference product manufacturer may assert in a lawsuit, such as patents that were filed more than four years after the reference product received market approval. The limit shall not apply to patents claiming certain methods for using the biologic drug.

The court in which the infringement lawsuit is filed may increase the limit if justice so requires or if there is good cause for the increase.

Summary as of: Introduced in Senate

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