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Pfizer, the world's biggest drug company, has sued
four of its rivals in an attempt to protect its famous
erectile dysfunction drug, Viagra.
US
firms Eli Lilly and Icos are planning an impotence
remedy known as Cialis.
Britain's
GlaxoSmithKline and Germany-based Bayer want to launch
Levitra into the same market.
But
Pfizer, which has just taken out a new patent on Viagra,
claims the new drugs infringe its intellectual property.
Generic
controversy
Cialis
and Levitra are half-way through the approval process
of the US Food and Drug Administration, and were timetabled
for launch next year.
Eli
Lilly said it would vigorously defend itself against
the Pfizer lawsuit.
Bayer
said it, too, would contest the lawsuit but it said
it was confident that the legal action would not delay
the US launch of Levitra.
The
row over Viagra lookalikes is the latest twist in
an increasing controversy over so-called generic drugs
- remedies that are copies of existing brand-name
products, while undercutting them on price.
Consumers
in the US are keen to gain more access to generics,
which are often blocked by major manufacturers.
Dozens
of drug cases
Earlier
this week, US President George W Bush promised to
open the market further, in the hope of providing
a wider choice of drugs, especially for the elderly.
The
Viagra case is unusual, because the firms making the
generic drugs are also major manufacturers.
In
most other cases, makers of generic drugs tend to
be smaller companies, often from the developing world.
However,
the makers of the Viagra rivals insist that their
drugs are not generic copies, but drugs in their own
rights.
There
are currently dozens of cases relating to generic
drugs proceeding through the US courts.
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