On Nov 09, 2017, Court of Appeal for Federal Circuit affirmed
the district court’s judgment of infringement & validity of two patents against
Watson & Sandoz in Multaq (Dornedarone) case.
Sanofi owns U.S.
Patent Nos. 8,318,800 and 8,410,167, which describe and claim compositions
and uses of the cardiovascular (specifically, antiarrhythmic) drug dronedarone.
The ’800 patent, which expires in 2019, claims pharmaceutical compositions
containing dronedarone. The ’167 patent, which expires in 2029, claims methods
of reducing hospitalization by administering dronedarone to patients having
specified characteristics. After a three-day bench trial, the district court
ruled that Watson’s and Sandoz’s sale of their proposed generic drugs, with
their proposed labels, would induce physicians to infringe asserted claims and they
did not prove that any of the asserted claims were invalid for obviousness. Watson
and Sandoz appealed.
Federal circuit reviewed the district court’s finding of inducement based on encouragement
and inferred intent for clear error. Federal circuit did not find error. It
held that the reference to the Clinical Studies section (14) of the label
expressly directs the reader to that section for elaboration of the class of
patients for whom the drug is indicated to achieve the stated objective, i.e., reduced
hospitalization. Section 14 leads with and features a subsection on the
ATHENA study, which sets forth the positive results, relating to reduced hospitalization,
for patients having the risk factors. There was considerable testimony that
this label encourages—and would be known by Watson and Sandoz to
encourage—administration of the drug to those patients, thereby causing
infringement.
With respect to obviousness,
Watson and Sandoz initially argued that the district court committed legal
error by applying too high a standard for proving a reasonable expectation of
success. Federal circuit however disagreed. Federal circuit held that Watson
and Sandoz did not carry their burden of showing that a person of ordinary
skill in the art in February 2008 would have had a reasonable expectation that
dronedarone would succeed in reducing cardiovascular hospitalization in the
ATHENA patient population.
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