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Vol. I · No. 181 · 1899 Reports Wednesday, July 1, 2026
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Lee Questions Witnesses on Hatch-Waxman Balance of Drug Innovation and Access

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Topics in This Edition

Hatch-Waxman ActGeneric drugsBiosimilarsPharmaceutical patents

Summary

The clip shows Rep. Laurel Lee opening a House hearing questioning witnesses on the Hatch-Waxman Act's role in balancing pharmaceutical innovation with patient access to affordable generics and biosimilars. She asks about successful elements of the 1984 law and challenges like patent thickets. Witnesses include a representative from an innovator perspective and one from a biosimilar/generic manufacturer, discussing litigation frameworks, development timelines, and regulatory certainty. The segment ends as time expires.

Editorial Assessment

The broadcast accurately captures a standard congressional exchange on a well-studied policy area. Claims about Hatch-Waxman's historical impact, average exclusivity periods of 12-14 years, and biosimilar development costs of roughly 8 years and $100 million are supported by multiple analyses. Patent thicket issues and resulting US delays versus Europe are documented in peer-reviewed work. Viewers miss discussion of ongoing legislative proposals or quantitative data on recent generic entry trends. Framing remains neutral, highlighting shared goals rather than partisan conflict.

Key Moments

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Hatch-Waxman created balance between patent rights and generic pathways, proving effective for decades.

Confirmed by FDA and PhRMA analyses showing generic share rising from 19% to over 90% of prescriptions.

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Patent thickets via continuation patents have increased in last 10 years, delaying biosimilar entry versus other countries.

Multiple studies document US assertion of far more patents per product, with examples like Humira showing multi-year delays.

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Biosimilar development takes 8 years and costs around $100 million.

Standard industry figures cited in economics literature range from 7-8 years and $100-250 million.

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Drug exclusivity periods have remained steady at 12-14 years despite thickets.

Studies including Commonwealth Fund and JAMA Internal Medicine report median/average market exclusivity around 12-14.5 years.

Sources Consulted

  1. 40 Years of Hatch-Waxman: What is the Hatch-Waxman Act?
  2. 40th Anniversary of the Generic Drug Approval Pathway
  3. Biological patent thickets and delayed access to biosimilars: an American problem
  4. The Economics of Biosimilars
  5. Market Exclusivity and U.S. Prescription Drugs
  6. Overpatented, Overpriced