Skip Navigation

  1. About Us
    1. Overview
    2. History
    3. Recognition
    4. Offices
  2. Our Practice
    1. Practice Areas
      1. Patents, Utility Models, and Industrial Designs
      2. Trademarks
      3. Copyrights
      4. Corporate, Commercial and Business Law
      5. IP Litigation, Alternative Dispute Resolution
      6. Regulatory Law
      7. Licensing, Tech Transfer & Franchising
      8. Anti-Piracy, Anti-Counterfeiting & Enforcement
    2. Industry Groups
      1. Media, Sports & Entertainment Law Group
      2. Life Science & Pharmaceutical Law Group
  3. Our People
    1. Partners
      1. Sergio L. Olivares, Sr. † (1931-2010)
      2. Sergio L. Olivares, Jr.
      3. Luis C. Schmidt
      4. Cesar Ramos, Jr.
      5. Antonio Belaunzaran
      6. Gustavo A. Alcocer
      7. Jose Ignacio De Santiago
      8. Alejandro Luna
      9. Alonso Camargo
      10. Daniel Sanchez
    2. Associates (A - M)
      1. Osvaldo Amaral
      2. Armando Arenas
      3. Sofía Arroyo
      4. Guillermo Ballesteros
      5. Varinia Calleros
      6. Abraham Diaz
      7. Georgina Flores
      8. Pedro Herrera
      9. Carlos Maya
    3. Associates (N - Z)
      1. Mauricio Narváez
      2. Víctor Ramírez
      3. Sergio Rangel
      4. Maria del Carmen Sada
      5. Juan Luis Serrano
      6. Guillermo Treviño
      7. Carlos Woodworth
    4. All Attorneys / Engineers
    5. Firm Administration
  4. Knowledge & Resources
    1. Articles
      1. Trademark Law Articles
        1. Use requirements
        2. Approach to composite marks changed, again
        3. Life Sciences Handbook 2011 - Country Q&A
        4. Mexico should accept secondary meaning
        5. Getting the Deal Through - Trademarks 2011
        6. Pharmaceutical Trademarks 2010/2011 - A Global Guide
        7. No legal basis for banning names derived from INNs
        8. How Latin America tackles cutting-edge IP issues
        9. Specialised IP court corrects IMPI
        10. Protecting trade dress
        11. 43 more items...
      2. Patent Law Articles
        1. Getting the Deal Through - Patents 2012
        2. Surge of Patent Application Final Rejections Provides Unique Opportunity for Patent Precent Making
        3. Mexico issues regulations to approve biologic drugs
        4. Latin America Roundtable
        5. New regulations pending
        6. The International Comparative Guide
        7. Marketing authorization for pharmaceutical
        8. Approval of follow-on biologics in Mexico
        9. Mexican Linkage Gazette April 2011
        10. Patent Prosecution Highway in Mexico
        11. 37 more items...
      3. Copyright Law Articles
        1. Advertising in social media networks
        2. Technology challenges digital rights
        3. Exceptions to copyright protection and the permitted uses of copyright works in the hi-tech and digital sectors
        4. Derechos sobre producción audiovisual
        5. How Latin America tackles cutting-edge IP issues
        6. Copyright Litigation 2010
        7. Legislation and enforcement - Copyrights 2010
        8. Valuing folklore
        9. Protecting novel ideas
        10. Mexico's fair use balancing act
        11. 100 more items...
      4. Corporate Law Articles
        1. Mexico issues Personal Data Protection Rules
        2. How data affects innovation
        3. A practical cross-border
        4. New registry for security interests
        5. The International Comparative Legal Guide to: Merger Control 2011
        6. The International Comparative Legal Guide to: Merger Control 2010
        7. Due diligence issues to consider in M&A
        8. Income expectations in licensing
        9. The reasons for valuation
        10. Amendments proposed to franchise regulation
      5. IP Litigation, ADR Articles
        1. Scope of new specialised courts widened
        2. Reform of preliminary injunctions
        3. Mexican Patent Office excludes Formulation Patents from Linkage Gazette
        4. Mexico gets ready to approve biocomparable drugs
        5. Mexico's hotel for the stars highlights power in the name
        6. Supreme Court upholds the worth of formulation patents
        7. Getting the Deal Through - Patents 2010
        8. Getting the Deal Through Trademarks 2010
        9. Trademark enforcement
        10. Venues for appealing IMPI decisions
        11. 15 more items...
      6. Regulatory Law Articles
        1. Recent amendment to the Federal Law for Consumer Protection
        2. Amendments to the Federal Law for Consumer Protection
        3. Mexico issues Personal Data Protection Rules
        4. New Regulations Pending
        5. Marketing authorization for pharmaceutical products to foreign applicants
        6. Data Package Exclusivity (DPE)
        7. Supreme Court upholds the worth of formulation patents
        8. Pharmaceutical trademarks
        9. Framework for biotherapeutic products established
        10. Pharmaceutical Advertising 2009
        11. 4 more items...
      7. Licensing, Tech Transfer Articles
        1. Creating a secure franchise system
      8. Anti-Piracy, Anti-Counterfeiting Articles
        1. New register against counterfeits
        2. Beat the counterfeiters in Mexico
        3. Battling counterfeits through Customs
        4. Getting the Deal Through Trademarks 2010
        5. Enforcing plant variety rights in Mexico
        6. Pharmaceutical Trademarks 2009
        7. Internet Issues
        8. Anti-counterfeiting 2009
        9. Vegetal variety rights enforced
        10. New Customs rules lead to seizures
        11. 3 more items...
      9. Media, Sports & Entertainment Focused Articles
        1. Advertising in social media networks
        2. Whither Rental Rights?
        3. Improved protection for personalities
      10. Life Sciences Focused Articles
        1. Latin America Roundtable
        2. New regulations pending
        3. The International Comparative
        4. Approval of follow-on biologics in Mexico
        5. Global Pharmaceutical Linkage Regulations:
        6. Life Sciences Handbook 2011 - Country Q&A
        7. Supreme Court upholds the worth of formulation patents
        8. Repercussions expected on medicine advertising campaign in Mexico
        9. Framework for biotherapeutic products established
        10. Pharmaceutical Trademarks 2009
        11. 1 more item...
    2. Webinar Archive
      1. Webinar - Changes to Mexican Patent and Healthcare Laws for Life Sciences
      2. Webinar - Digital Rights Issues in Copyright Law
      3. Webinar - Data Package Exclusivity Rights in Latin America
    3. Recognition
    4. News
      1. Mexico subscribes Madrid Protocol
      2. Presumed Guilty - How can a law firm help win an Emmy?
      3. New rules came in force to speed timeframes in administrative appeal proceedings
      4. Recent reforms to the Mexican Industrial Property Law dealing with trademark priority rights
      5. Olivares & Cia. ranking
      6. Data Package Exclusivity (DPE)
      7. Mr. Sergio Olivares Sr's Passing
      8. Pharma Linkage Regulations Supreme Court Decision
      9. Managing IP magazine has recognized Olivares & Cia. as the leading firm for patent work in Mexico
      10. Mexican Congress amends the Patent Law
      11. 1 more item...
  5. Events
  6. Offices
  7. Contact Us
  8. Quick guide to Mexico’s regulatory system
    1. Patent regulatory overview
    2. Trademark regulatory overview
    3. Copyright regulatory overview
    4. Corporate & Commercial Regulatory overview

Home » Knowledge & Resources » Articles » Life Sciences Focused Articles » Repercussions expected on medicine advertising campaign in Mexico

Repercussions expected on medicine advertising campaign in Mexico

By Víctor Ramírez
World Trademark Review, December2009/January 2010

A recent high-profile marketing initiative by a Mexican pharmaceutical company appears to be a clear example of unfair competition. This article puts the campaign in context and looks at the  likely outcome for the adviertiser

A bold new television advertising and publicity campaign was launched recently by a pharmaceutical company called Genoma Lab.
The campaign was designed to raw attention to the company’s newest product – a line of generic pharmaceuticals called Primer Nivel (‘First Level’). This name has a particular meaning within the Mexican health system. It is not a registered trademark even though it appears to be used as such in the promotions.
Many pharmaceutical companies, both local and international, have good reason to be disturbed by this development due to the powerful nature of the advertising campaign, which appears to include false or misleading information. For instance, it seems to suggest that Primer Nivel is the product maker’s brand name.

Setting a precedent

Before elaborating on the case of the Primer Nivel campaign, it may be useful to consider a similar earlier case involving advertising that was considered by the Mexican Trademark Office and the Mexican federal courts to be unfair competition.
The case began in 1998, when Congress approved a new health law which opened the market to generic drugs, but the law’s definition of "generic medicine" (a product for which patent protection has expired or is in the public domain, and is designated by the name of its active ingredients) was vague. These products were required to have a reference medicine but did not have to prove interchangeability or bioequivalence. 
Fortunately, the issue was clarified by means of a decree from the Ministry of Health modifying several provisions of the law related to health consumables, which came into force in February 2008. The amendments imposed an interchangeability or bioequivalence requirement for all generic medicine products.
However, before this new amendment was enacted one of the biggest groups of pharmacies in Mexico took advantage of the lack of bioequivalence requirement and began to sell what the group called “similar” medicines. These are medicines produced with the same active ingredient as "innovative" medicines, but that have not passed through Ministry of Health tests. Despite the fact that the similar medicines had not been tested, the pharmacies started selling them under the slogan “lo mismo pero mas barato" (“the same but cheaper”), making consumers believe that these medicines were generic interchangeable medicines.
This situation provoked leading pharmaceutical companies to bring unfair competition actions against the pharmacies. Prolonged litigation led to most of the unfair competition cases brought by the pharmaceutical companies being decided in their favour. The Federal Administrative Court held that advertising based on the “the same but cheaper” slogan constituted unfair competition because the phrase is deceptive and false (Case RA 126/2008).

Primer Nivel campaign

A similar situation may have occurred in relation to the Primer Nivel pharmaceutical product line. The advertising campaign is arguably misleading. The television commercials include a direct recommendation for buyers to check with their pharmacist as to whether the medication they have been prescribed is protected by a valid patent. If the medication is no longer protected by a valid patent, the announcer advises the buyer to ask the pharmacist to provide the Primer Nivel equivalent medication instead.
The advertisements also portray a customer asking the pharmacist whether the medicine that appears on the prescription is still patented. When hearing that it is not covered, the customer asks for the Primer Nivel equivalent. The commercial makes hypothetical comparisons about the amount of money the buyer will save if he chooses the Primer Nivel products. Additionally, the advertisements claim that the Primer Nivel medicines are manufactured by 30 leading pharmaceutical companies. The claims are not specific and the commercial merely shows the house marks and logos of some major players, such as Novartis, Sanofi-Aventis, AstraZeneca, Boehringer Ingelheim and others.

Causing confusion

As stated, the term "Primer Nivel", which the company is using as a mark, is a term that has a very specific meaning in the Mexican health system. In Mexico, the medical service provided by the government is divided into three: the first level, the second level and the third level, and the medicines provided as a part of those respective service levels are also known as first-level, second-level or third-level medications.
Commercial use of the "Primer Nivel" term to distinguish medicines in television commercials risks confusing consumers and thus may breach national regulations in fields such as industrial property, health and consumer rights. From the perspective of trademark law, the advertising appears to breach the Intellectual Property Law in the following ways: 
  • It falsely claims that the Primer Nivel medicines are manufactured by 30 of the world’s leading pharmaceutical companies, with the aim of taking advantage of the prestige of such companies by association. 
  •  The advertising may amount to a false comparison. The advertisements are not specific as to which medicines manufactured by well-known pharmaceutical companies are being compared with the Primer Nivel medicines, so they cannot in fact ensure that the buyer is receiving medicines of equal quality at cheaper prices. The advertisements aim to make buyers believe that the quality and efficacy of the Primer Nivel medicines are the same as the unspecified comparator medicines through using the names of well-known pharmaceutical manufacturing companies. This creates the false impression that the Primer Nivel medicines are manufactured by these well-known companies only at cheaper prices.
Both situations could be considered infringement under the Intellectual Property Law. Additionally, the term "Primer Nivel" should not be used as a trademark because the Intellectual Property Law prohibits the registration of names that are likely to deceive the public or induce error, or that are deemed to convey false indications of the nature, components or quality of the products being advertised. The law also prohibits the registration of a mark, technical name or term in common use that refers to the product the trademark intends to cover. However, "Primer Nivel" is a technical name given by the Mexican health regulations to a specific type of medicines, prescribed under the local healthcare system.

Health dangers

The advertising may also breach the regulation for medical supplements, which clearly prohibits companies from including any type of false information in marketing related to such products.
Additionally, the rights of buyers are also likely to be breached by this kind of advertising, where false information may lead to consumers being medicated with a product which might not be the most suitable for their particular condition and could jeopardise their health.
The fact that the advertisements recommend that consumers ask pharmacists whether a prescribed medicine is patented, or if the patent is still in force, may also be deceptive, because pharmacists are not in fact able to provide this information.
Section 32 of the Law for Consumer Protection establishes that information or advertising in any medium related to goods or services shall be true and free of words or trademarks that induce, or may induce, error or confusion due to their use being deceptive, inexact, false, exaggerated, partial, artificial or tendentious.

Clear case of unfair competition?

The seemingly false information conveyed in the advertising of Primer Nivel appears to constitute a case of unfair competition, which harms the interests of many competitors and consumers, and which will certainly spark a reaction from pharmaceutical competitors, agencies in charge of consumer protection and health regulators.
We expect action in the near future. Some probable actions may include: 
  • An opposition with the trademark office against the trademark application for Primer Nivel; 
  • Infringement actions on the basis of unfair competition; 
  • Complaints filed with the Ministry of Health or the Federal Bureau for Consumer Protection by consumers who feel they have been misled by the advertising; and 
  • Actions by the Ministry of Health and the Federal Bureau for Consumer Protection. (The Ministry of Health has already requested a ban on the advertisements. For example, on 14th September 2009 the Ministry of Health ordered the Mexican company Genoma Lab to stop airing television commercials that include misleading or false information.)