On Sep 28, 2018, District of Massachusetts granted summary
judgment of non-infringement for 2 patents & denied with respect to one
patent.
Plaintiffs Purdue brought suit against Collegium
Pharmaceutical, Inc. for infringement of three patents U.S. Patent Nos. 9,073,933 (“the ’933 patent”), 8,652,497 (“the ’497 patent”), and 9,155,717 (“the ’717 patent”). The
infringement claims arise out of Collegium’s filing of a New Drug Application
(“NDA”) for its abuse-deterrent, extended-release oxycodone products, XTAMPZA ER. Collegium moved for summary
judgment on three grounds. First, it maintains that the ’933 patent is invalid
under a theory of issue preclusion, or collateral estoppel. That contention is
based on a judgment from the Southern District of New York, affirmed by the
Federal Circuit, that three related patents (low-ABUK) owned by Purdue are invalid. Second, Collegium asserts
that even if the ’933 patent is valid, it is entitled to judgment of
non-infringement as a matter of law because it is not literally infringing and
oxycodone myristate (the active ingredient in its product) is not the
equivalent of oxycodone hydrochloride (the active ingredient in Purdue’s
product). Third, it argues that summary judgment of non-infringement of the
’497 and ’717 patents is appropriate because those patents claim the addition
of an “irritant,” and its product does not contain an “irritant.”
The ’933 patent is entitled “Oxycodone Hydrochloride Having
Less Than 25 PPM 14- Hydroxycodeinone (impurity).” The ’497 & ‘717 patents
are entitled “Pharmaceutical Formulation Containing Irritant.” Before this litigation,
in 2016, the Federal Circuit affirmed Judge Stein’s determination that the
asserted claims of the low-ABUK patents were obvious in light of the prior art
in Teva case. Then after that in
another action, Mylan moved to dismiss the complaint for infringement of ‘933
on the basis of collateral estoppel (that is, issue preclusion) in light of
Judge Stein’s decision in Teva. Magistrate
Judge Sherry R. Fallon issued a report and recommendation to the district judge
recommending that the motion to dismiss be denied. Magistrate Judge Fallon
concluded that “defendants have failed to establish that the invalid claims of
the previously-litigated low-ABUK patents are sufficiently identical to the
disputed claims of the ’933 patent.”
Collegium developed an abuse-deterrent, ER formulation of
oxycodone called XTAMPZA ER. XTAMPZA ER uses a microsphere-incapsule platform
and was “designed to protect the active pharmaceutical ingredient from
immediate release upon attempted manipulation of the formulation.” The
microspheres contain myristic acid, yellow beeswax, carnauba wax, stearoyl
polyoxyl-32 glycerides, and oxycodone API. Collegium appears to contend that
the drug substance present in XTAMPZA ER is oxycodone base; Purdue disputes
that fact, contending that oxycodone is present in XTAMPZA ER as oxycodone
myristate salt.
Issue preclusion:
Purdue asserted three independent claims from the ’933
patent: claims 1, 10, and 16. Relying on Teva,
which found the asserted claims of the low-ABUK patents invalid, Collegium
argued that the ’933 patent claims are invalid under a theory of issue
preclusion. However, Court took a similar approach as in Mylan, and denied the motion for summary judgment. Specifically
when Judge considered the low-ABUK patent claims, he determined that “the
8α-derived limitation of the asserted product claims [would be] disregarded as
a process limitation” that was immaterial to obviousness. Thus The Teva court thus only actually
adjudicated the validity of the patents claiming “low-ABUK oxycodone API
product.” Collegium contends that despite the surface differences between the
product claims in this case and the prior litigation, issue preclusion should
apply because those differences do not materially alter the validity analysis. Court,
however said that under the circumstances, the step of “removing 8α” may
materially affect the ’933 patent’s validity analysis. See Graham v. John
Deere Co., 383 U.S. 1, 17–18 (1966) (listing factors of obviousness analysis).
At the very least, viewing the facts in the light most favorable to the
non-moving party, Purdue has raised a disputed issue of material fact as to
this point. Accordingly, Collegium will not be granted judgment as a matter of
law on the basis of issue preclusion.
Non-infringement
of ’933 patent:
Collegium also contends that it is entitled to summary
judgment of non-infringement on the ’933 patent. Collegium maintains that the
doctrine of prosecution history estoppel and the Federal Circuit’s opinion in Wm. Wrigley Jr. Co. v. Cadbury Adams USA
LLC, 683 F.3d 1356 (Fed. Cir. 2012), preclude Purdue as a matter of law
from claiming that oxycodone myristate is the equivalent of oxycodone
hydrochloride. Collegium further contends that XTAMPZA ER does not infringe
under the doctrine of equivalents because oxycodone myristate does not perform
the same function as oxycodone hydrochloride. Collegium first contends that
Purdue’s claim is barred by the doctrine of prosecution history estoppel. It
contends that during prosecution of the application that would become the ’072
patent, “Purdue specifically distinguished the [hydrochloride] form of
oxycodone over other forms of oxycodone.” According to Collegium, having made
that distinction to overcome a PTO rejection, Purdue thereby disclaimed all
forms of oxycodone other than oxycodone hydrochloride. Court held that Based on
that language, Purdue may well have disclaimed products including oxycodone
free base during prosecution. But it does not follow that Purdue necessarily
surrendered all forms of oxycodone other than oxycodone hydrochloride. At a
minimum, Purdue’s response to the examiner did not clearly disclaim all other
forms of oxycodone, including oxycodone myristate.
With respect to Function-Way-Result analysis, Collegium argued
that myristic acid functions “to lock oxycodone up in wax so that it is not
accessible to an abuser.” Based on that evidence, Collegium asks the Court to
find that “myristic acid . . . functions to solubilize oxycodone in the wax
matrix and hydrochloric acid . . . functions to make oxycodone bioavailable,”
and are therefore not equivalents. Purdue, on the other hand, maintained that
the correct comparison for the function-way-result test does not involve
myristic acid at all. Purdue argued that “the claim element that is literally
missing from [XTAMPZA ER], and for which the doctrine of equivalents is
relevant, is oxycodone hydrochloride, not ‘hydrochloride.’ The equivalent
element is oxycodone myristate, not myristic acid.” Court said that
Collegium has provided insufficient evidence as to the function of oxycodone
myristate— as opposed to myristic acid—to refute Purdue’s theory. It appears
that Purdue has presented a genuine issue of disputed material fact as to
whether oxycodone myristate performs substantially the same function as
oxycodone hydrochloride, and that accordingly summary judgment is
inappropriate.
Non-infringement
of ’497 and’717 patents:
Finally, Collegium argued that it is entitled to summary
judgment of non-infringement of the ’497 patent and the ’717 patent because the
myristic acid used in XTAMPZA ER is not an “irritant.” The resolution of that
issue turns on the Court’s previous construction of the term “irritant.” As
noted, Collegium uses myristic acid in XTAMPZA ER to dissolve oxycodone base in
wax. Although Purdue does not dispute that myristic acid has such a purpose, it
contends that myristic acid was also included in XTAMPZA ER to act as “an
abuse-deterring irritant.” According to Purdue, the molar ratio of myristic
acid to oxycodone base in XTAMPZA ER is 6:1. This, Purdue contends, is evidence
that the extra myristic acid functions solely as an irritant. Collegium
contends that all of the myristic acid is necessary to solubilize oxycodone and
drive salt formation. Its NDA for XTAMPZA ER specifically states that excess
myristic acid is necessary to ensure that enough oxycodone myristate is formed
and to reduce the concentration of free oxycodone base. With respect to the
abuse-potential studies, Collegium explains that its NDA stated that irritation
after snorting was “likely caused by particle size and lack of solubility of
the wax microspheres.” Collegium also denies that myristic acid was included
for any purpose other than solubilizing oxycodone in the wax matrix.
Court siding with Collegium said that it had put forth
evidence that “excess myristic acid” is in fact an excipient that performs a
necessary function and not act as an irritant. Purdue has not rebutted that
evidence with anything other than speculation and argument. Again, Purdue
claimed a composition with a separate “irritant” component. It does not (and
likely could not) claim every composition that happened to have an irritating
quality under some set of circumstances, whether or not the irritant was a
separate component. Accordingly, and under the circumstances, the Court will
grant summary judgment as to non-infringement of the’497 and ’717 patents.
CONCLUSION: The
motion for summary judgment of Collegium Pharmaceutical, Inc. is GRANTED in
part and DENIED in part. Specifically, summary judgment is granted to defendant
on all claims of US 8,652,497; 9,155,717 and denied with respect to US 9,073,933.
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