On May 01, 2018, New Jersey district court granted a motion
for partial summary judgment of validity of a formulation patent for RELISTOR®
(methylnaltrexone bromide) Injection.
This is a Hatch-Waxman case involving a patent dispute
regarding Defendants Mylan Inc., Mylan Laboratories Ltd., Mylan Pharmaceuticals,
Inc., and Actavis LLC (collectively, “Defendants”) seek to make and sell a
generic version of Plaintiff’s Relistor®
(methylnaltrexone bromide) pharmaceutical product prior to the expiration of
the relevant patents. Plaintiffs’ motion concerns claim 8 of US Patent No. 8,552,025 (the “’025
patent”). Plaintiffs, Progenics Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Salix Pharmaceuticals,
Inc., Valeant Pharmaceuticals International, Inc., and Wyeth LLC (collectively,
“Plaintiffs.”) moved for partial summary judgment on Defendants’ affirmative
defense to infringement of invalidity due to obviousness. Plaintiffs contended
that, as to claim 8, Defendants cannot prove invalidity due to obviousness.
Claim 8 relates to
stable pharmaceutical preparation comprising a solution of methylnaltrexone
comprises a pH between about 3.0 and about 4.0 & wherein the preparation is
stable to storage for 24 months at about room temperature.
In moving for summary judgment, Plaintiffs made three
arguments: 1) Defendants have failed to identify any motivation to modify the
prior art methylnaltrexone products; 2) Defendants cannot establish that the
“stable to storage for 24 months” element was known in the prior art; and 3)
Defendants cannot prove their “obvious to try” theory. Court said that based on
the record, the prior art did not teach how to formulate an injectable
pharmaceutical solution that is stable for 24 months. Defendants have offered
no evidence to the contrary. Thus, while the idea of an injectable
pharmaceutical solution stable for 24 months seems unlikely to have been
unknown, there is no evidence before this Court that the art taught how to make
one. The evidence of record showed that the prior art taught a variety of
techniques for improving the stability of such solutions, but there is no
evidence that anyone had ever achieved an injectable pharmaceutical solution
stable for 24 months. Court further said that, for the principle of overlapping
ranges to apply, the difference between the claimed invention and the prior art
must be the range or value of a particular variable. The differences between
claim 8 and each of the prior art references (Bahal ’154, Oshlack ’111, and
Fawcett 1997) is greater than the value of the pH variable. Thus Court
was not persuaded, as a matter of law, that any of the cited prior art
references which teach the use of naloxone and naltrexone presents an
overlapping pH range sufficient to make out a prima facie case of obviousness.
Defendants have not persuaded the Court that any of the prior art references dealing
with naloxone and naltrexone – that is, Bahal ’154, Oshlack ’111, and Fawcett
1997 – taught something that would have made claim 8 a predictable result.
The motion for partial summary judgment of validity of claim
8 thus granted.
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