Docket: T-1160-16
Citation:
2017 FC 21
BETWEEN:
|
ALEXION
PHARMACEUTICALS INC.
|
Applicant
|
and
|
THE ATTORNEY
GENERAL OF CANADA
|
Respondent
|
REASONS FOR AN ORDER dated December 28, 2016
SIMPSON J.
[1]
Alexion Pharmaceuticals Inc. [Alexion] has filed
a Notice of Motion pursuant to Federal Court Rule 51 in which it appeals two
Orders made by Prothonotary Aylen dated September 1, 2016.
[2]
The first Order struck, as premature, Alexion’s
Application for Judicial Review of a decision of the Patented Medicine Prices
Review Board [the Board] allowing certain amendments to the Board’s Notice of
Allegation. The appeal from this Order will be described as the “First Appeal”.
[3]
In the second Order, the Prothonotary dismissed
as moot Alexion’s motion for an order on consent protecting certain information
as confidential. The appeal from this Order will be described as the “Second Appeal”.
I.
The First Appeal
[4]
Alexion is a Delaware company headquartered in
New Haven, Connecticut. It has marketed Soliris (eculizumab) in Canada through
a Canadian affiliate since 2009. Soliris is used to treat rare and devastating
blood and genetic disorders.
[5]
On January 15, 2015, the Board’s Staff delivered
a Statement of Allegations stating that from 2012 to 2014, Soliris had been sold
at an excessive price [the Allegations]. The Allegations included a request
for the following relief:
i)
An Order requiring Alexion to “reduce the price of Soliris within 30 days from the date of
the Board’s Order to a price that does not exceed the international median
among the comparator countries”;
ii)
An Order requiring Alexion to “offset the cumulative excess revenues it has received during
the period of 1 January 2012 to 30 June 2014 by making a payment to Her Majesty
in Right of Canada, within 30 days of the date of the Board’s Order, in the
amount of xxxxxxx”; and
iii)
“Any other remedies
Board Staff may seek and the Board may permit”.
[6]
The international price referred to in paragraph
i) above is known as the median international price comparison or MIPC and the
test based on that price is called the MPIC Test.
[7]
A Notice of Hearing was issued on January 20,
2015 indicating that the Board would hold a public hearing to determine whether
excessive prices had been charged. In December 2015, the parties agreed to an
11 day hearing which was scheduled to start on June 27, 2016.
[8]
However, on May 20, 2016, the Board’s Staff
brought a motion for leave to amend the Allegations to add alternative remedies
[the Amendments] including a request that Alexion be ordered to reduce the
price of Soliris to a price not exceeding the international lowest price among
all comparator countries [the LIPC Test]. The MPIC and LIPC Tests will be
referred to collectively as the [Price Tests].
[9]
The Amendments make it possible for the Board to
ignore the MIPC Test in favour of the LIPC Test and find increased cumulative
excess revenues.
[10]
The Amendments also make it possible for the
Board to award remedies retroactively to 2009. I have so concluded because the
Amendments show at paragraph 31(d) that the period from January 1, 2012 to June 30,
2014, which had been claimed as the period for which excess revenues were to be
offset, has been deleted. Accordingly, in my view, the Amendments leave it
open to the Board to make an order covering a period prior to 2012. There is
therefore potential for a remedy from 2009. This view is reinforced by the fact
that paragraph 31 of the Amendments show pricing calculations which are
redacted but which date back to 2009.
[11]
In its decision dated June 10, 2016, the Board
allowed the Amendments on the basis that the prejudice suffered by Alexion
could be remedied by adjourning the hearing. The hearing has now been extended
and rescheduled. It is projected to last 19 days and is to commence in
mid-January 2017.
[12]
Alexion’s Application for Judicial Review was
filed on July 13, 2016 [the Application]. It seeks to quash the Board’s
decision to allow the Amendments, and asks for declarations that i) the Board
has no jurisdiction to retroactively confiscate revenues from excessive prices and
ii) the Board must consult with industry under section 96(5) of the Patent
Act, RSC, 1985, c P-4, [the Act] before making changes to the applicable
Price Tests. Section 96(5) of the Act says that the Board shall “consult with the Minister, the provincial ministers of the
Crown responsible for health and such representatives of consumer groups and
representatives of the pharmaceutical industry as the Minister may designate
for the purpose” before making any guidelines [the Consultations].
[13]
On July 29, 2016, the Respondent moved to strike
Alexion’s Application before Prothonotary Aylen on the basis that it is
premature because, absent exceptional circumstances, interlocutory rulings by
administrative tribunals should not be challenged until the tribunal has made
its final decision. The Respondent relied on C.B. Powell Ltd v Canada
(Border Services Agency), 2010 FCA 61 at paragraphs 30 – 33.
[14]
The Prothonotary exercised her discretion and concluded
that the facts did not disclose exceptional circumstances. She noted that if
excessive pricing were established at the hearing, Alexion could make all its
arguments to the Board against the alternative remedies described in the
Amendments. Further, she observed that the arguments about the remedies could
also be advanced, if necessary, on an application for judicial review of the
Board’s decision.
[15]
On this appeal Alexion made submissions similar
to those made before the Prothonotary. They include the following:
a)
Alexion should not be required to face a hearing
where Price Tests which have not been the subject of Consultations are in use;
b)
Remedies should not be retroactive and the payments
sought on this basis are crippling and are not justified by the Act or its
Regulations;
c)
The extension of the hearing by 8 days is a
drastic change.
d)
The Amendments are contrary to the Rule of Law.
[16]
I have found no palpable or overriding error in
the Prothonotary’s decision on the motion to strike. She has not applied wrong
principles or misapprehended any evidence. I share her view that the arguments
Alexion wishes to advance about the retroactivity of the alternative remedies
sought and the applicability of the Price Tests can be made before the Board
and, if necessary, on a subsequent application for judicial review of the Board’s
decision. I agree with the Prothonotary that Alexion’s submissions do not raise
fundamental questions about the Rule of Law.
[17]
While it appears that there is potential for a
drastic impact on Alexion if excessive pricing is found and if remedies are granted
in line with the Amendments, that impact is not certain and not immediate. In
my view, the Amendments and the increase in the length of the hearing before
the Board do not constitute exceptional circumstances.
[18]
For these Reasons, the First Appeal was dismissed.
II.
The Second Appeal
[19]
The Prothonotary also dealt with Alexion’s
motion on consent for an order that certain material be treated as confidential
[the Motion and the Confidential Material]. She understood that the confidentiality
order was sought to protect certain information during the Application and she therefore
dismissed the Motion as moot because she had struck the Application.
[20]
Alexion submits that the Confidential Material
was intended for the Prothonotary’s use on the Motion to Strike and that
ignoring it constituted an error in law.
[21]
I have considered Alexion’s letter to the
Federal Court dated October 21, 2016 and other materials in the Court file which
were before the Prothonotary. I have found that the Prothonotary would reasonably
have understood that the Confidential Material was put forward only for future
use at the hearing of the Application. Nothing in the material suggests that the
Confidential Material was relevant on the Motion to Strike.
[22]
I have therefore concluded that the Prothonotary
did not err in law. Her decision was correct and she did not misapprehend the
facts when she dismissed the Motion for mootness.
[23]
For these Reasons, the Second Appeal was
dismissed. However, Alexion remains entitled to bring a fresh Motion for protection
of the Confidential Material.
"Sandra J. Simpson"
Ottawa, Ontario
January 6, 2017