On Nov 15, 2018, Delaware court found that Sigmapharma’s ANDA infringes
claim 1 of U.S. Patent No. 5,763,476 which covers Saphris®.
The ’476 patent, relates to “Sublingual or Buccal
Pharmaceutical Composition” & claims composition which disintegrates within
30 seconds. Forest sets its specification as that it can release a batch of its
drug product if: (1) the number of sample tablets that disintegrate within 30
seconds is less than 3/6 tablets or between 4 – 15/18 tablets; and (2) the
number of sample tablets that disintegrate within 55 seconds is 6/6, 16/18, or
17/18. Dr. Kupiec (Sigmapharma’s expert) concluded that there were no 6/6 test
results from two of Sigmapharm’s batches. However, court found testing method
unreliable & called it questionable. First, Dr. Kupiec only measured the
temperature of the water once, before putting the basket in the water, and he
did not check the temperature during or after his experimentation. Second, Dr.
Kupiec testified that he did not probe all of the remaining cores, only a
“majority” or a “fair amount.” Third, Dr. Kupiec’s lab notebook provides
insufficient details, especially compared to Dr. Myers’ (Plaintiff’s expert)
lab notebook. Finally, after careful examination of each expert’s background
and experience, court concluded that Dr. Kupiec did not have the same level of
expertise with USP as Dr. Myers.
With respect to internal testing in SIgmapharma, CEO, Dr.
Spiridon Spireas, testified that only 2 tablets out of the 564 total tablets
tested across the 94 runs disintegrated within 30 seconds. In other words, Dr.
Spireas contends that for all but a couple of runs, zero tablets (0/6)
disintegrated within 30 seconds. But court did not find this testimony credible
because Dr Spireas did not perform or supervise the test results. Also the lab
notebooks do not state how many tablets out of 6 remained after 30 seconds.
Instead, the lab notebooks simply report, with few exceptions, “At 30 Seconds:
Fails.” Under the Sigmapharm monograph governing these testing procedures,
“fails” means a test result of 0/6, 1/6, 2/6, or 3/6. In other words, many more
than zero tablets could have disintegrated within 30 seconds, and the internal
scientist would have been in compliance with the Sigmapharm monograph by
recording “At 30 Seconds: Fails.” Thus, how many tablets actually disintegrated
within 30 seconds is simply unknown. Moreover, both Dr. Spireas and the
internal scientists (whose testimony was heard via video deposition) admitted
that they were at times not conducting disintegration tests in accordance with
USP<701>. In addition, one scientist indicated that she was not palpating
any remaining cores to determine if it was hard or soft. These practices all
undermine the reliability of the internal test results.
Court said that Sigmapharm’s current specification has two
disintegration tests: a “30-Seconds Test,” in which the tablets must “fail” USP
at 30 seconds, and a “55-Seconds Test,” in which the tablets must “pass” USP at
55 seconds. But claim 1 does not literally claim a pharmaceutical composition
that “passes” USP at 30 seconds. Rather, it claims a pharmaceutical composition
that “disintegrates within 30 seconds in water at 37°C.” At no time has the
court construed “disintegrates within 30 seconds in water at 37°C” to mean that
tablets must “pass” USP<701>. This means that, in order to prove
infringement, Forest must prove that Sigmapharm’s generic sublingual asenapine
tablets will “disintegrate within 30 seconds in water at 37°C.” Sigmapharm can
attempt to undermine this proof by showing that the tablets will not “disintegrate
within 30 seconds in water at 37°C.” But Sigmapharm cannot short-cut the
infringement analysis by focusing only on whether its tablets “pass” or “fail”
USP<701>. The problem is that “failing” USP<701> is not sufficient
proof that a batch of tablets will not disintegrate within 30 seconds in water
at 37°C, meaning “failing” is not proof of non-infringement. Experts from both
sides agreed that a test designed to show that a batch of tablets will not
disintegrate within 30 seconds—and therefore not infringe claim 1—requires a
higher standard of proof than just “failing” USP<701> . Specifically, to
establish non-infringement, experts from both sides required 0/6 tablets to
completely disintegrate within 30 seconds, meaning there is some hard core
remaining for all 6 tablets. If a hard core remains for only 4 or 5 tablets,
then the experts would proceed to stage-two testing on an additional 12
tablets. After stage-two testing, and again to establish non-infringement, a
hard core must remain for 16 or 17 out of the 18 total tablets tested. Thus,
consistent with the procedure established by USP<701> , the experts would
require anywhere between 89% and 100% of the sample tablets to not disintegrate
within 30 seconds in order to impute the characteristics of those samples onto
an entire batch.
On the other side, Forest has proven by a preponderance of
the evidence that Sigmapharm’s accused product literally infringes claim 1 of
the ’476 patent, because Sigmapharm’s accused product disintegrates within 30
seconds in water at 37°C. Forest has proven that 6/6 tablets disintegrated
within 30 seconds for at least one run each from representative batches PD0054:43,
PD0054:44, and PD0054:33.
Thus, court held that Forest has proven by a preponderance
of the evidence, that Sigmapharm infringes claim 1 of the ’476 patent.
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