On May 05, 2017, The Federal
Circuit ruled that Breckenridge Pharmaceutical Inc.’s planned generic version
of the laxative drug SUPREP® infringes a
patent owned by Braintree Laboratories Inc., reversing a New York federal
judge’s 2016 ruling.
U.S. Patent No. 6,946,149 is
directed to compositions and methods for purging a patient’s colon, as is
routinely performed prior to a colonoscopy. Braintree markets a bowel prep kit
named SUPREP, which is listed in orange book. SUPREP is sold as a kit
consisting of two six-ounce bottles of an aqueous hypertonic solution of
potassium sulfate, magnesium sulfate, and sodium sulfate. Its FDA-approved
label instructs patients to fill each bottle with water to the sixteen-ounce
line (473 mL) prior to consumption and directs that the first bottle be
taken the evening before and the second bottle the morning of the colonoscopy.
According to SUPREP’s label, “[t]he dose for colon cleansing requires
administration of two bottles of SUPREP.
On March 15, 2012, Breckenridge submitted an Abbreviated New
Drug Application (“ANDA”) to the FDA, seeking approval to market a generic
version of SUPREP. Braintree filed the instant action accusing Breckenridge of
infringement. The parties’ dispute centers on the relationship between the
“purgation” and “from about 100 ml to about 500 ml” limitations. Court
previously construed the “purgation” limitation of the ’149 patent in Braintree
Laboratories, Inc. v. Novel Laboratories, Inc., 749 F.3d 1349 (Fed. Cir. 2014).
While the Novel appeal was pending, Breckenridge stipulated that the district
court’s Novel construction of “purgation” would apply in this case.
Breckenridge further stipulated to “be bound by a final decision in the Novel
Case . . . on any issues having to do with patent invalidity . . . and
non-infringement” other than the “from about 100 ml to about 500 ml”
limitation.
Breckenridge subsequently moved for summary judgment of
noninfringement based on this limitation, arguing its proposed generic does
not infringe the claims of the ’149 patent “because it is administered as 946
ml of aqueous solution, and thus falls outside the recited volume range.”
It argued that based both on the claim construction of the term and the
infringement inquiry under § 271(e), “from about 100 ml to about 500 ml” must
refer to the total volume of solution administered. It argued its
proposed label could not induce infringement of method claims 19, 20, and 23
under § 271(e) because its ANDA label instructs patients to consume the “entire
amount” of solution (946 mL) for the sole indication of “preparation for
colonoscopy”—not only one bottle to “induce colonic purgation.”
The district court granted Breckenridge’s motion for summary
judgment of noninfringement. It held that Novel did not preclude Breckenridge’s
noninfringement theory because that opinion did not address the separate volume
limitation. It construed “from about 100 ml to about 500 ml” to mean “the
entire volume of solution administered to a patient over a treatment period
rather than the volume of a single bottle, or half-dose.” Because every
asserted claim requires “from about 100 ml to about 500 ml,” the district court
found that Breckenridge’s proposed product, with a total volume of 946 mL, does
not infringe any of the asserted claims. The district court also agreed
that Breckenridge’s ANDA label could not induce infringement under § 271(e),
finding inducing purgation without “achieving a fully cleansed colon” is not an
FDA-approved use of Breckenridge’s product.
During appeal Breckenridge argues the district court’s
summary judgment of noninfringement should be affirmed notwithstanding its
construction of the volume limitation because Braintree’s infringement theory
is contrary to 35 U.S.C. § 271(e). Court disagreed. This case is distinguishable
from the cases in which we have held an ANDA applicant’s proposed label would
not induce infringement [Warner-Lambert Co v. Apotex Corp., 316 F.3d 1348
(Fed. Cir. 2003); Allergan, Inc. v. Alcon Labs., Inc., 324 F.3d 1322 (Fed. Cir.
2003); Bayer Schering Pharma AG v. Lupin, Ltd., 676 F.3d 1316, 1321 (Fed. Cir.
2012)].
In contrast, inducing purgation is not a distinct use of
Breckenridge’s proposed product; inducing purgation is the means by which the
approved indication achieves its result. Breckenridge concedes that its
proposed product “cleanses the colon of a patient by inducing purgation” when
taken as directed by its label. J.A. 1780–81 ¶¶ 25, 37–38 (emphasis added). Its
stipulations make clear that inducing purgation is not supplemental or ancillary
to its proposed indication of colon cleansing—it is plainly within the scope of
Breckenridge’s proposed indication. Therefore We hold that Breckenridge’s
labeled indication for colon cleansing “recommends or suggests to physicians
that the drug is safe and effective for administration to patients for the
purposes of inducing [purgation].” There can be no dispute that, given SUPREP’s
sole approved use, the FDA has approved SUPREP as safe and effective for the
indication of colon cleansing. Because Breckenridge’s labeled indication of
colon cleansing requires performing the claimed steps in order to achieve colon
cleansing, it follows that a physician would understand Breckenridge’s ANDA
label to recommend or suggest that “inducing purgation” is safe and effective.
Finally Federal Circuit said that we have considered all of Breckenridge’s arguments on
appeal and find them to be without merit. For the foregoing reasons, we reverse
the district court’s grant of summary judgment of noninfringement and remand
for entry of judgment for Braintree.
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