Aug
11 (Reuters) - Gilead Sciences Inc is entitled to receive the attorney
fees it incurred related to hepatitis C patent litigation with drugmaker
Merck & Co Inc, a U.S. district judge has ruled.
In
June, Gilead was freed from paying up $200 million in damages for
infringing two Merck patents related to Gilead's blockbuster drugs
Sovaldi and Harvoni, after a U.S. judge found a pattern of misconduct by
Merck including lying under oath and other unethical practices.
In
a filing on Thursday, U.S. District Judge Beth Labson Freeman said that
Gilead was entitled to relief from the fees it incurred while defending
the case.
Merck
is trying to catch up to Gilead, which dominates the market on a new
generation of hepatitis C drugs that can cure well over 90 percent of
patients with the liver disease.
The
case dates back to 2013 when Gilead and Merck sued each other, claiming
ownership of laboratory work underlying sofosbuvir, the active
ingredient in Gilead's drugs.
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