(Source: Business Wire)

Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. (NASDAQ: TEVA) commented today on
the abbreviated new drug application (ANDA) containing a Paragraph IV
certification for COPAXONE® (glatiramer acetate injection),
filed by Mylan Pharmaceuticals Inc. Teva also announced that it has
filed a lawsuit against Mylan Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Mylan Inc. and
Natco Pharma Ltd. for patent infringement in the U.S. District Court for
the Southern District of New York.
Mylan's filing of a purported generic version of COPAXONE®
was not unexpected, as the company announced its intention over a year
ago. Teva received Mylan's Paragraph IV certification notice referring
to Teva's U.S. Patents, which cover the chemical composition of COPAXONE®,
pharmaceutical compositions containing it, and methods of using it.
These patents are listed in the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's
(FDA) Orange Book and extend through May 24, 2014.
Teva remains committed to vigorously defending its COPAXONE®
intellectual property rights against infringement wherever they are
challenged and intends to pursue all relevant regulatory avenues via the
FDA. Teva's lawsuit has been filed within the 45-day period provided
under the Hatch-Waxman legislation. The lawsuit triggers a stay of FDA
approval for the Mylan ANDA until the earlier of the expiration of a
period of 30 months and a district court decision in its favor, and is
also subject to the expiration of any exclusivity rights that may attach
to earlier filed ANDAs.
COPAXONE® is a highly-complicated product to develop and
manufacture, and given the inability to fully characterize the active
ingredients of COPAXONE®, Teva has serious doubts about any
generic applicant's ability to demonstrate conclusively that the
composition of its product is identical to that of COPAXONE®.
Teva contends that any company that files an application for any
glatiramoid substance, via an ANDA or 505(b)(2) application, should
conduct full-scale, placebo-controlled clinical trials with measured
clinical endpoints in MS patients to establish safety, efficacy and
immunogenicity in this patient population. Internal research at Teva has
indicated that even minor changes in the synthetic process and/or
molecular weight distribution of a glatiramoid can have severe
ramifications on the safety and mechanism of action of the product.
In July 2008, Teva received a Paragraph IV certification notice from
first-to-file Momenta Pharmaceuticals, Inc./Sandoz Inc. relating to
their ANDA containing a Paragraph IV certification for COPAXONE®.
On August 28, 2008, Teva filed a lawsuit in the U.S.