Patented Medicine Prices Review Board
The Patented Medicine Prices Review Board is a federal quasi-judicial regulatory and reporting agency in Canada.
The mandate of the agency is to protect consumers by ensuring that the prices of patented medication charged by manufacturers are not excessive. The board also reports on trends, research and development in the Canadian pharmaceutical industry.
The PMRPB investigates, reviews and negotiates the price of drugs that are still under patent and which have no generic substitutes. It establishes the maximum prices that can be charged in Canada.
Accountability
The board is accountable to the Parliament of Canada through the Minister of Health, the elected official responsible for the health portfolio. Under sections 89 and 100 of the Patent Act, the board produces an annual report submitted to the minister, who tables it in the House of Commons.Background
Bill C-22, which was passed in 1987, established a compulsory licensing system under which drug patent holders were required to allow competing drug manufacturers to import their patented drug in exchange for a very modest 4% royalty, which resulted in an increase in the market share of generic drugs. At the same time, it established the federal Patented Medicine Prices Review Board. The board determines a maximum price for individual drugs through a review process, and negotiates "voluntary compliance agreements" with drug companies to ensure that "manufacturer prices are within justification, and not excessive".The PMPRB is an independent federal quasi-judicial body established through Section 91 of the Patent Act. Sections 79 through to 103 of the Act set out the mandate, structure, appointment process, and jurisdiction of the Board. The objective of the board is to preventing manufacturers of patented medicines from charging excessive prices.