On Nov 07, 2017, England and Wales High Court (Patents Court)
rejected Accord’s invalidity argument & found Lacosamde compound patent
valid.
The patent in suit is EP (UK) 0888289, which covers an
anti-epileptic drug called lacosamide. The patent expired on 18th March
2017. There is a supplementary
protection certificate (SPC/GB09/007) which extends protection for lacosamide until
2022. Accord contended that the patent is invalid on two grounds viz. lack
of priority & obviousness.
With respect to lack of priority, Accord challenged the patentee’s legal
entitlement to claim priority from the 1996 priority document. Accord contended that the assignment of 4th February
1997 from Prof. Kohn (inventor) to RCT (patent holder) only took effect as an
assignment of the bare legal title to the invention and priority claim.
What it did not do was assign the equitable or beneficial title to that
property to RCT. Court after analysing the relevant case laws
held that all the indications available to RCT were that the
university was aware of what was going on and that Professor Kohn was executing
the assignment because he was obliged to do so pursuant to his obligations to
the university. Those indications do not only derive from Professor Kohn
but also from the university itself. Court found that on 4th February
1997 RCT was not on notice of any possible conflicting interest held by the
university. Therefore, RCT acquired good title to the invention including
any priority right.
Accord’s second challenge was on obviousness. It was based on the state of the art before
the priority date, which included a number of papers and other publications
from Prof Kohn’s group relating to their work on anticonvulsant compounds. Accord relies on mainly master’s thesis by a
student called Philipe Le Gall. It is entitled
2-Substituted-2-acetamido-N-benzylacetamides Synthesis. Accord argued that given the Le Gall thesis in 1996, the
first thing the skilled team would do is a literature search & identification few lead compounds such as LY274959. Court however disagreed & held that the skilled team would not predict that an aliphatic compound
mentioned in arts would have good activity. That was because so much of the
data related to aromatic rather than aliphatic compounds. Court finally
held that putting it all another way, there are just too many
uncertainties to justify a finding of obviousness. Even if the team got
as far as deciding to make and test lead compound they would know that the
uncertainties meant that either outcome, good or bad, could just as easily be
rationalised after the event as the other. That is not a fair prospect of
success.
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