On Jan 22, 2018, District court of Delaware issued its
ruling in Precedex (dexmedetomidine) injection product.
Court found 3 patents invalid &
infringed and remaining 1 patent valid & infringed by ANDA filer in Hatch-Waxman
litigation.
Plaintiff (Hospira) brought this
patent infringement action against Amneal Pharmaceuticals, LLC in 2015. At
issue in this case are ready-to-use formulations of the compound dexmedetomidine.
Amneal filed Abbreviated New Drug
Application ("ANDA") No. 207551, seeking to engage in the commercial
manufacture, use, and sale of generic versions of Hospira's 4μg/mL
dexmedetomidine products ("Precedex premix") in 50 mL and 100 mL
glass vials. Since its FDA approval in 1999, Hospira's original Precedex
product (100 μg/mL dexmedetomidine hydrochloride), also known as Precedex
concentrate, has been sold in a 2 mL glass vial. Before Precedex concentrate is
administered to a patient, it must be diluted to an appropriate concentration
per the instructions on the Precedex concentrate label. The delay in drug
administration to patients and increased risks of dosing error and
contamination associated with this dilution step led Hospira to develop
ready-to-use formulations of Precedex.
The Court held a bench trial from August 21-24, 2017.
Plaintiff asserted that Defendant's ANDA submission constitutes infringement of
claims 3 and 4 of U.S. Patent No.
8,242,158; claim 4 of U.S. Patent
No. 8,338,470; claim 5 of U.S.
Patent No. 8,455,527 and claim 6 of U.S.
Patent No. 8,648,106. The' 158, '470, and' 106 patents each describe
ready-to-use pharmaceutical compositions of dexmedetomidine or a
pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof for parenteral administration, disposed
within a sealed glass container. Defendant argued that all the asserted claims
are invalid as obvious, and further
asserts that claim 3 of the '158 patent, claim 4 of the '470 patent, and claim
5 of the '527 patent are invalid as anticipated.
Additionally, Defendant contends that claim 6 of the '106 patent is indefinite under 35 U.S.C. § 112.
OBVIOUSNESS OF THE '158,
'470, AND '527 PATENTS:
Defendant argued that in view of pharmaceutical packaging
knowledge in the art, the asserted claims are obvious over the prior art Precedex
concentrate product in combination with the 2010 label accompanying
it, or obvious over Trissel. Plaintiff responded that the asserted claims are not
obvious because the prior art did not disclose a ready-to-use 4 μg/mL
dexmedetomidine solution or suggest development of such a solution, the USPTO
issued the patents-in-suit over the Precedex concentrate product and the accompanying
label, and commercial success of the Precedex premix product supports
nonobviousness.
The parties did not dispute that the Precedex concentrate
product and its accompanying 2010 label taught many elements of the asserted
claims. The 2010 label discloses that Precedex concentrate, once diluted to a
concentration of 4 μg/mL, is to be administered intravenously to achieve
patient sedation. Additionally, the label directs a POSA to prepare 50mL of a 4
μg/mL dexmedetomidine formulation by diluting the Precedex concentrate product
with 0.9% sodium chloride. The parties dispute whether a POSA would have
been motivated to develop a ready-to-use 4 μg/mL dexmedetomidine formulation
disposed within a sealed glass container with reasonable expectation of success.
Court agreed with Defendant that a POSA would have been
motivated to develop a ready-to-use dexmedetomidine formulation, and would have
combined the Precedex concentrate product with the 2010 label to do so. The
2010 label is a package insert that is included with the Precedex concentrate
product with the intent that it be used in combination with the product to
ensure its safe and effective use. Cain's disclosure that a hospital
pharmacy was routinely making available to physicians for clinical use premixed
10 mL syringes of 4 μg/mL dexmedetomidine demonstrates that at least one large
medical institution (Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh) recognized the value of
ready-to-use dexmedetomidine formulations. Court also held that Based on the
Precedex concentrate product and the 2010 label, a POSA would have known that
Precedex concentrate is stable in a sealed glass container. Because like the inventors, a POSA would have
been familiar with the general knowledge that glass was the preferred packaging
for small-volume injectables. Even crediting Plaintiff's assertion that glass
vials are not interchangeable (which would increase the number of potential
packaging options), the prior art supports a finding that a POSA would have
reasonably expected to succeed in using a sealed glass container to store a 4
μg/mL ready-to-use dexmedetomidine formulation.
With respect to commercial success, court held that although
the direct competition between the invention and the prior art provides
evidence of the required nexus, that evidence is weakened by the confounding
factor of Plaintiff's aggressive business practices that attempted to shift
demand to Plaintiff's premix product before generic concentrate product
market entry. Since the '214 blocking patent renders weak any evidence of
commercial success, and Plaintiff's business practices further weaken evidence
of the required nexus, it concluded that considerations of commercial success
do not support finding the asserted patents nonobvious.
Thus considering all of the evidence, court concluded that
Defendant has proven by clear and convincing evidence that claims 3 and 4 of
the '15 8 patent, claim 4 of the '4 70 patent, and claim 5 of the '527 patent
are invalid as obvious.
OBVIOUSNESS OF THE
'106 PATENT:
Defendant argued that claim 6 of the '106 patent is obvious
because the "no more than about 2%
decrease" in dexmedetomidine concentration limitation is inherent
in a 4 μg/mL dexmedetomidine formulation in normal saline disposed within a
sealed glass container. Plaintiff counters that Defendant's evidence is
insufficient to prove inherency. Court held that Defendant offers no expert
testimony regarding the scientific principles underlying its inherency
argument, and relies on just two examples of stability data covering the
claimed 4 μg/mL dexmedetomidine concentration. As Plaintiff notes, Defendant's expert
conceded that stability data for a 4 μg/mL dexmedetomidine formulation could
not be inferred from the Precedex concentrate label, and that he would have had
to confirm any stability hypothesis for a 4 μg/mL dexmedetomidine formulation
through testing.
The lack of evidence of degradants or oxidation of
dexmedetomidine formulations increases the weight of Defendant's affirmative
examples of dexmedetomidine's stability at room temperature in a sealed glass
container. It does not, however, provide additional affirmative evidence to
support Defendant's contention. Despite this additional support for Defendant's
examples, given the absence of supporting expert testimony, court found the
examples insufficiently powered to establish inherency by clear and convincing
evidence.
INDEFINITENESS OF THE
'106 PATENT:
The essence of Defendant's indefiniteness argument is that
because the '106 patent discloses concentration measurements performed under
both long-term and accelerated conditions and claim 6 does not explicitly
specify which condition to use, a POSA would not know whether the "no more
than about 2% decrease" limitation should be measured under long-term or accelerated
conditions.
Court held that although claim 6 of the '106 patent does not
explicitly specify the storage condition under which dexmedetomidine
concentration should be measured, the intrinsic evidence demonstrates that the
claim is not indefinite. The language of claim 6 indicates that the purpose of
the claimed invention is to administer the dexmedetomidine formulation to a
patient. (' 106 patent at claim 1 ("A ready to use liquid pharmaceutical
composition for parenteral administration to a subject ... ")).
Additionally, the detailed description of the invention makes clear that the discovery
that dexmedetomidine could be stored long-term contributed to generating
the invention. Considering all of the evidence, court found that the '106
patent adequately conveys to a POSA that long-term storage is the condition
relevant to claim 6. Defendant has failed to provide clear and convincing
evidence that claim 6 of the ' 106 patent is invalid under 3 5 U.S. C. § 112.
INFRINGEMENT OF THE
'158, '470, '527, AND '106 PATENTS:
At trial the parties stipulated that Defendant infringes all
limitations of the asserted claims except (1) whether Defendant's ANDA covers
products disposed within a "sealed
glass container," and (2) whether Defendant's ANDA products,
"when stored in the glass
container for at least five months[,] exhibit[] no more than about 2% decrease
in the concentration of dexmedetomidine," as required by the '106
patent.
Plaintiff argued that Defendant's ANDA documents and the
testimony of Plaintiff's technical expert, Dr. Linhardt, establish that
Defendant's ANDA products are disposed within a "sealed glass container" under any proposed construction of the
term. Defendant does not argue in post-trial briefing that its ANDA products do
not meet the "sealed glass container" limitation. Therefore,
Defendant has conceded that its proposed ANDA products meet this limitation.
Plaintiff asserted that Defendant infringes the "no more than about 2% decrease"
limitation of claim 6 of the '106 patent under two separate theories. First,
Plaintiff asserts that Defendant infringes the "no more than about 2%
decrease" limitation in claim 6 of the '106 patent as a matter of law. Second, Plaintiff argues
that Defendant infringes this limitation as a matter of fact.
Defendant's ANDA specification provides that Defendant's
proposed ANDA products, as measured by high performance liquid chromatography
("HPLC") assay, will remain within 90-110% of their initial dexmedetomidine
concentration claimed on the products' label for the 2-year shelf life also claimed
on the label. According to Defendant, the 3-5% variability inherent in the HPLC
measurement technique specified by its ANDA precludes its ANDA specification
from directly addressing the issue of infringement because the possible 3-5%
variability in any concentration measurement exceeds the 2% limit of the
claimed concentration loss.
Plaintiff argued that Defendant's proposed ANDA products
infringe as a matter of law because the less than or equal to 10%
dexmedetomidine concentration loss in Defendant's ANDA specification directly
addresses the claim limitation of "no more than about 2% decrease" in
dexmedetomidine concentration after at least 5 months of storage. According
to Plaintiff, since a concentration loss of no more than 10% includes a concentration
loss of no more than about 2%, Defendant's proposed ANDA products infringe under
Sunovion.
Citing Ferring, Defendant submits that Sunovion does not apply,
because the ANDA product specification does not specify a dexmedetomidine
concentration for the claimed five-month measurement time point.
Court held that with the knowledge that dexmedetomidine
concentrations cannot increase under the relevant storage conditions, however,
it becomes clear that a decrease of not more than 10% over 24 months imposes a
limitation not just for 24 months, but for all time points less than 24 months
as well. The concentration decrease of no more than 10% at 5 months
necessarily present in Defendant's ANDA includes the claimed concentration
decrease of no more than about 2% at 5 months. Therefore, Plaintiff has proven
that Defendant's proposed AND A products infringe
claim 6 of the ' 106 patent as a matter of law under Sunovion.
CONCLUSION:
Defendant has proven by clear and convincing evidence that
the asserted claims of the '158, '470, and '527 patents are invalid. Defendant
has failed to prove by clear and convincing evidence, however, that the
asserted claim of the '106 patent is invalid. Plaintiff has proven that Defendant
infringes the asserted claims of the’158,’470, and’527 patents as a matter of
fact and that Defendant infringes the asserted claim of the’106 patent as a
matter of law.