The Complementary Protection Certificate C00915894 / 01
is based on basic patent EP0915894 B1. The Swiss SPC covers product “tenofovir
disoproxil fumarate + emtricitabine“. A first marketing authorization for
the active substance combination Tenofovir Disoproxil fumarate together with
Emtricitabin the defendant for the Product Truvada® at no. 57316 on March 21,
2006. Tenofovir disoproxil, a nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor
(NRTIs) as an active ingredient with antiviral action is undisputed because it
has the structure that was claimed in claim 1 of EP’894 patent. The fumarate
salt of tenofovir disoproxil will also be detected but salts of the active
substance are expressly mentioned in claims 1 and 2. Further references to
co-formulations can be found in the paragraphs [0061] but without specific
reference to further therapeutic agents.
As stated above and not questioned by the parties, the base
product protects the active substance tenofovir disoproxil as a fumarate salt.
This is the subject of the right of protection in the protection area of the
base. Claim 27 of the base patent protects a pharmaceutical composition, which
contain such an active ingredient as tenofovir disoproxil as Fumarate salt,
together with a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof Carrier and optionally
with other active ingredients. This is also described in [0047] basic
patent. Further this combination of tenofovir disoproxil as a fumarate salt in
the claims of the basic patent expressly specified in combination with another
active ingredient, if only as an option. The individual concrete further active
substance emticitabine, appears neither in a claim in combination with
tenofovir disoproxil as a fumarate salt, or else in the description mentioned.
Against this point of view, however, would be the ECJ
decision Actavis / Sanofi, according to which tenofovir disoproxil the
core contribution of the basic patent, but not the further active ingredient
and certainly not the specific selection of the further Active substance as
emticitabine (not the subject of the basic patent). Even if one were to try the
ECJ jurisprudence Medeva for the present case, one would not get a clear
one answer, whether the law of suitability is legal, because the Medeva
criteria are not clear. However the injury test, as described by the
Federal Court in the decision Fosinopril has been confirmed, is simple
and comprehensible and leads great legal certainty. Therefore the
application for annulment of SPC dismissed accordingly. The decision may be
appealed against within 30 days of the opening of the Federal Supreme Court.
[Mepha Pharma AG, V Gilead Sciences Inc; Case No.
O2017_001; Oct 03, 2017]
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