Conference programme
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Wednesday 31 May (1830 - 2030)
Thursday 1 June (0840 - 0910)
Session details
Keynote Speaker
Arun Rao Deputy Assistant Attorney General, US Department of Justice, Washington, DC
Thursday 1 June (0910 - 0940)
Session details
Keynote Speaker
Mark Abdoo Associate Commissioner for Global Policy and Strategy, US Food and Drug Administration, Washington, DC
Thursday 1 June (0940 - 1225)
Session details
Topic one
Post-Covid-19 litigation trends
Moderators
James C Fraser Thompson Hine, Washington, DC
Beth Weinman Ropes & Gray, Washington, DC
Topic two
Responsibility, liability and conflict of interests: risks met by compliance officers
Moderators
Catherine Longeval Van Bael & Bellis, Brussels
Emily Mason Amgen, Los Angeles, California
Topic three
Evolution of product liability rules
Moderators
Eric Alexander Reed Smith, Washington, DC
Edona Vila Borden Ladner Gervais, Toronto, Ontario
Topic four
Evolution of telemedicine (survey conducted by the IBA Healthcare and Life Sciences Committee)
Moderators
Renata Fialho Veirano, São Paulo
René Quashie Vice President, Digital Health, Consumer Technology Association, producer of CES®, Washington, DC
Topic five
Rare diseases and the continuous challenge of marketing an orphan drug
Moderators
David Parsons Leadiant Biosciences, Washington, DC
Kristin Wall Norton Rose, Toronto, Ontario
Topic six
Current opportunities and challenges in strategic collaborations
Moderators
Harry Rubin Kramer Levin, New York
Elysangela De Oliveria Rabelo Maurer Rabelo Maurer, Brazil
Topic seven
The European unitary patent court system
Moderators
Christophe Ronse Altius, Brussels
Amrish Tiwari KNS Partners, Gurgaon, Haryana
Topic eight
Post public health emergency
Moderator
Howard Sklamberg Arnold & Porter, Washington, DC
Topic nine
Patents in the US versus ROW
Moderators
Jason Jardine Knobbe Martens, San Diego, California
Alex Spiegler ArentFox Schiff, New York
Topic ten
Impact of metaverse on life sciences industry: fiction or future reality?
Moderators
Jeff Costellia Nixon Peabody, Washington, DC
Elisa Stefanini Portolano Cavallo, Milan
Topic eleven
Recent regulatory changes and opportunities in medical and recreational cannabis
Moderators
Ignacio Gillmore Carey, Santiago
Mariana Larrea Grupo Libera, Mexico City
Topic twelve
Public to private sector technology transfer: challenges and solutions
Moderator
Camila Parise Pinheiro Neto, São Paulo
Topic thirteen
Food labelling (octagons, symbols, difficulties) and cannabis regulations
Moderators
Ana Maria Castro Lloreda Camacho, Bogota
Viviana Cervieri Cervieri Monsuárez, Montevido
Topic fourteen
Managing market access at a global level
Moderators
Markus Schott Bär & Karrer, Zurich
Charlotte Tillett Stevens & Bolton, Guildford, Surrey, England
Topic fifteen
Pricing of medications
Moderators
Miranda Franco Holland & Knight, Washington, DC
Andreas Wildi Walder Wyss, Zurich
Topic sixteen
Abortion pill: medicine versus law
Moderators
John Murphy Chief Policy Officer, Biotechnology Innovation Organization, Washington, DC
Eva Temkin King & Spalding, Washington, DC
Topic seventeen
How new players will impact traditional healthcare providers
Moderator
Gary Copelovitz Lipa Meir & Co, Tel Aviv
Healthcare and Life Sciences Law Committee (Lead)
Intellectual Property and Entertainment Law Committee (Lead)
Technology Law Committee (Lead)
Session/Workshop Chair(s)
Eric Lawrence Alexander , Ana Maria Castro , Viviana Cervieri , Gary Copelovitz , Jeffrey Costellia , Renata Fialho , Miranda Franco , James C Fraser , Ignacio Gillmore , Yuval Horn , Jason Jardine , Mariana Larrea , Catherine Longeval , Emily Mason , John Murphy III , Camila Parise , David Parsons , René Quashie , Elysangela Rabelo , Christophe Ronse , Harry Rubin , Markus Schott , Howard Sklamberg , Alex Spiegler , Elisa Stefanini , Eva Temkin , Charlotte Tillett , Amrish Tiwari , Edona Vila , Kristin Wall , Beth Weinman , Andreas Wildi
Thursday 1 June (1230 - 1300)
Session details
Dr Ryan Reeves Director of Science and Technology, International Space Station US National Lab, Melbourne, Florida
Thursday 1 June (1300 - 1345)
Thursday 1 June (1345 - 1445)
Session/Workshop Chair(s)
Thursday 1 June (1445 - 1545)
Session details
How can we ethically and effectively share and value health data for both primary and secondary use? Join our panel of experts as they will explore the opportunities and challenges of leveraging health data to improve healthcare outcomes, drive innovation, and advance research. We’ll delve into key questions such as: How can we ensure data privacy and security while promoting data sharing? What are the ethical considerations around data ownership and informed consent? Which should be the boundaries between the processing of health data, privacy and the development of innovation in health? What are the concerns and challenges for the international transfer of data between the US and EU due to the shield, Data Governance Act and European data space? Don’t miss this discussion on the cutting edge of health data sharing and valuation.
Session/Workshop Chair(s)
Thursday 1 June (1600 - 1700)
Session details
The M&A panel will focus on recent worldwide M&A activity in the life science sector, and market dynamics that are impacting levels of M&A activity. The panel will consider various types of deals as well as alternatives to M&A such as licensing and collaboration deals between biotechs and big pharma. Considerations such as the state of capital markets and regulatory developments will also be reviewed.
Session/Workshop Chair(s)
Thursday 1 June (1700 - 1800)
Session details
During the past decade, the Food industry has been under constant transformation. From climate change to consumer awareness and a pandemic, the sector faced variations that tested its resilience and innovation ability. With increased interest in plant-based options, sustainable food production, and consumer health concerns with affordability, disruptive technologies are emerging.
Our panel aims to discuss how those trends and standards for increased transparency and safety will reflect in new regulatory and post-market realities.
Session/Workshop Chair(s)
Thursday 1 June (1930 - 2230)
Friday 2 June (0830 - 0840)
Session/Workshop Chair(s)
Friday 2 June (0840 - 0945)
Session details
Expedited programs such as accelerated approval has been a critical tool to get promising new treatments to patients more quickly and have been the subject matter of an EU legislative proposal. However, such programs are increasingly a source of controversy, with new pressures emerging with respect to the trade-offs associated with residual uncertainties in approvals based on certain biomarkers or clinical endpoints, the costs of such products, the speed of confirmation of effectiveness via post-market clinical trials, and the use of real-world evidence to support such confirmation. This panel will take a comparative look at such expedited programs and examine these evolving regulatory and legal issues.
Session/Workshop Chair(s)
Friday 2 June (0945 - 1100)
Session details
The pandemic triggered various threats to the patent system in various jurisdictions. Some of them were temporary and unharmful but others seem to sustain trends and intimidation against innovators, especially in some fields such as biotechnology.
The panel will analyze and comment on practices including potential restrictive patentability criteria, patent backlogs, compulsory licensing, weak patent enforcement, litigation strategies, and lack of regulatory data protection.
The discussion will include the weight of the TRIPS waiver expansion and WHO pandemic treaty and the central role USTR have in determining IP policies which could have influence in the public and private sectors.
The mRNA space, especially in the context of the global rollout of the vaccines, also intersects with ongoing global IP policy issues. In many ways, pandemic, also demonstrated how innovators and governments were able to make progress together to improve global health.
Session/Workshop Chair(s)
Friday 2 June (1120 - 1230)
Session details
A life sciences company in the crosshairs of a government investigation faces wide variability in the penalties that can be brought against it and any responsible individuals within the company. Learn from government and in-house lawyers across the globe about the risk of criminal liability for regulatory violations. The panel will provide a comparison of the framework used in different countries for making prosecutorial decisions, and the compliance considerations that companies should consider minimising potential criminal exposure.