The plan is to issue CLs for Trastuzumab (or Herceptin, used for treating breast cancer), Ixabepilone (used for chemotherapy in breast cancer treatment) and Dasatinib (or Sprycel, for leukaemia).
These cost an average of $3,000-4,500 (Rs 1.64-2.45 lakh) for a month's treatment.
Last March, the Hyderabad-based Natco Pharma had won the first ever CL, to manufacture its generic version of Bayer's patent-protected anti-cancer drug, Nexavar.
With the licence, Natco sold the drug at Rs 8,880 for a pack of 120 tablets, a month's therapy, as against Rs 280,000, the cost at which Bayer sells Nexavar.
According to section 84 of the Indian Patents Act, a CL can be issued if the patented drug is unavailable, unaffordable or not supplied properly.
With CL, domestic companies can manufacture and market generic versions, paying a royalty to the patent holder company.
Natco had, in fact, begun selling the generic version, Dasatinib, of Bristol-Myers Squibb's Sprycel last year, without waiting for any CL.
The matter went to court.
Now comes the government's decision to legalise the move.
Natco is pricing Dasatinib at Rs 9,000 for a month, as compared to BMS' Rs 100,000 for a month's treatment. BMS also makes Ixabepilone, for which a CL decision is being taken.
The chief executive of an Indian generic company, engaged in a dispute with MNCs, said on condition of anonymity, "Most patented cancer drugs cost $5,000-6,000 a month.
How many patients in India, where there is no public insurance facility, can afford these prices?"
Unless MNCs are ready to change the strategy for the 1.2 billion people here, issuing a CL is the only option to make drugs affordable to the population, he added.
The Cancer Patients Aid Association has welcomed the government move.
Y K Sapru, its founder-chairman &
Sandoz to close generic development centre
New drug policy will hurt investment in pharma sector
50 stocks that you can BUY for 2013
Clinical trial deaths rise; pharma cos say not at fault
8 Indians among world's best performing CEOs