On Jun 05, 2018, Delaware district court held that the
asserted claims of the patent-in-suit are not invalid under the doctrine of
obviousness-type double patenting or prosecution laches in FIRAZYR®
Hatch-Waxman litigation.
In this patent infringement action, Shire and Sanofi-Aventis
("Plaintiffs") alleged that Fresenius Kabi USA, LLC,
("Defendant") filed an ANDA with USFDA to manufacture and sell a
generic version of FIRAZYR® (icatibant acetate) prior to the expiration of U.S. Patent No. 5,648,333. FIRAZYR®
Injection is used for the treatment of acute attacks of hereditary angioedema
("HAE") in adults 18 years of age and older. The court held a
four-day bench trial in this matter beginning on January 29, 2018. Plaintiffs
have asserted Claim 14 of the '333 Patent. Claim 14 of the '333 Patent claims:
A peptide of the
formula H-D-Arg-Arg-Pro-Hyp-Gly-Thia-Ser-D-Tic-Oic-Arg-OH or a physiologically
tolerable salt of said peptide.
Fresenius asserted that claims are invalid under the doctrine
of obviousness-type double patenting ("OTDP") in light of the prior
arts including, U.S. Patent No. 5,597,803 & under prosecution Laches.
Obviousness-Type
Double Patenting:
The obviousness-type double patenting analysis hinges on
whether (1) the removal of the N-terminal modification Fmoc from the peptides
of Claim 1 of the '803 Patent results in Claim 14 of the '333 Patent; and (2)
whether the N-terminal modifications in the '803 Patent are intended to be
permanent and integral components of the final peptide. Claim 14 of the '333
Patent claims a single ten-amino acid peptide known as icatibant and relates to "Peptides Having Bradykinin
Antagonist Action." In contrast, the '803 Patent relates to
"Bradykinin Peptides with Modifications at the N-Terminus" and covers
Fmoc-icatibant. Because Claim 1 of
the '803 Patent allows for modifications in the peptide sequence at two
positions, the court found that the claims themselves are different
under step one of the analysis even though they share some inventors and are
assigned to the same company.
Court next considered step 2 inquiry whether the differences
in subject matter of the two patents render the claims patentably
distinct-i.e., the later claim is not obvious over or anticipated by an earlier
claim. In arguing that the claims are not patentably distinct, Defendant made
three primary arguments. First, Defendant argued that the only difference
between Claim 1 of the '803 Patent and Claim 14 of the '333 Patent is the presence
or absence of the extra N-protecting groups-the Z and P groups. Second,
Defendant argued that the only difference between Fmoc-icatibant and icatibant
is the presence of Fmoc. Third,
Defendant argued it presented clear and convincing evidence demonstrating that
a POSA would have been motivated to remove the Fmoc and that they
would have had a reasonable expectation that the resulting peptide would be
a bradykinin antagonist.
The court found that persons having ordinary skill in the
art would not have removed Fmoc based on the patent itself and the prior art.
As of 1989, it was known that the addition of N-terminal modifications could
confer significant benefits to the resulting peptide, including reduction of
side effects and resistance to enzymatic degradation. Finally, the court found
that, contrary to Defendant's assertion, every example of a peptide of formula
I contains Z and every peptide evaluated for biological activity has a Z group.
The court, therefore, held that a POSA in 1989 using Claim 1 of the '803 Patent
as a starting point, would not have been motivated to remove the N-terminal
modifications from the peptides of Claim 1 of the '803 patent to result in
Claim 14 of the '333 Patent.
Defendant next argued that a POSA would understand that
Claim 14 of the '333 Patent does not recite any biological activity and that
and Claim 1 of the '803 Patent recites biological activity but does not require
it. Specifically, Defendant asserted that the POSA would have reasonably
expected the icatibant peptide remaining after Fmoc removal would be a
bradykinin antagonist based on its structure and the icatibant peptide would be
consistent with the prior art Stewart SAR Data. In contrast, Plaintiffs asserted
that Claim 14 of the '333 Patent concerns bradykinin antagonist activity because,
among other reasons, every example in the '333 Patent is a bradykinin
antagonist. Court held that the specification of the '803 patent contemplates two
different functional roles for Fmoc: (1) a protecting group used during
synthesis that is removed from a peptide under construction, meaning while that
peptide is attached to the resin or still has side chain protective groups, or
both; or (2) an integral component of the final peptide product. Therefore,
the peptides in the '803 Patent are not under construction and are, therefore,
not intermediates. That distinction would have instructed the POSA that the
modification was permanent, and would not have motivated the POSA to remove
Fmoc.
The court, also considered secondary consideration thought
prima facie case of obviousness was not established. Court found that the
secondary considerations weigh against a finding of obviousness-type double
patenting.
Prosecution Laches:
"The doctrine [of prosecution laches] 'may render a
patent unenforceable when it has issued only after an unreasonable and
unexplained delay in prosecution' that constitutes an egregious misuse of the
statutory patent system under the totality of the circumstances." It also
requires a showing of prejudice, which in turn requires "evidence of
intervening rights, i.e., that either the accused infringer or others invested
in, worked on, or used the claimed technology during the period of delay."
The '333 Patent issued from U.S. Patent Application 08/487,442 ("the '442
Application"), which was filed on June 7, 1995. The '442 Application
claims priority to five German patent applications and ten U.S. patent
applications.
Defendant primarily argued that Plaintiffs' four year
delay in prosecuting the patent between 1991 and 1995 was unreasonable and
unexplained because, during that time, applicants failed to provide a
substantive response to the PTO. Specifically, Defendant asserted that
Plaintiffs failed to provide the Patent Office with the in vivo data requested
to support utility of the '162 application and, instead, argued the in vitro
data was sufficient, which delayed prosecution. Defendant argued Plaintiffs had
the in vivo data related to icatibant, as early as March 1989 prior to the
original '162 application filing date.
Court held that "there are legitimate grounds for
refiling a patent application which should not normally be grounds for a
holding of laches, and the doctrine should be used sparingly lest statutory
provisions be unjustifiably vitiated." The filing of multiple continuing
applications is not per se unreasonable. Novozymes
AIS v. Genencor Int'!, Inc., 446 F. Supp. 2d 297, 333-34 (D. Del. 2006). In
the instant case, the court found Plaintiffs actively prosecuted without an
unreasonable or unexplained delay. The '333 Patent resulted from German
priority and U.S. applications of three distinct inventions. In addition to
the evidence adduced at trial, prosecution laches has not been applied to an
alleged four-year-delay. The court, therefore, found that Defendant did not
establish by clear and convincing evidence that there was an unreasonable and
unexplained delay in the prosecution of the '333 Patent. Thus, Claim 14 of the
'333 Patent is not invalid under the doctrine of prosecution laches.
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