SOUTH AFRICA: New anti-AIDS drug deal could short-change consumers
JOHANNESBURG, 26 Apr 2005 (PLUSNEWS) - The local pharmaceutical company, Aspen Pharmacare, will soon manufacture generic versions of two more patented anti-AIDS drugs and sell them in 95 developing countries.
According to the local Business Day newspaper, Aspen announced on Monday that under the terms of the deal, to be finalised in September, it would acquire the distribution rights in Africa for the antiretroviral (ARV) drugs Truvada and Viread, manufactured by US company Gilead.
Viread and Truvada are new-generation ARVs, increasingly prescribed in the US and Europe for strains of HIV that are resistant to other drugs because they have fewer side effects and are taken only once a day.
Aspen Pharmacare already produces generic copies of patented drugs made by GlaxoSmithKline, Boehringer-Ingelheim and Bristol-Meyers Squibb.
But AIDS activists raised concerns that under the deal, Aspen would simply take over part of Gilead's not-for-profit market, rather than becoming a competitor offering cheaper copies of the drugs.
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