On Dec 13, 2018, Advocate General of Court of Justice of European Union
(CJEU) opined on the issue of interpretation of Article 3(d) of SPC regulation
concerning the applicability of SPC for new formulation of old product.
Background:
This request was made in the context of a dispute between
the company Abraxis Bioscience LLC (‘Abraxis’) and the Comptroller General of
Patents, Designs and Trademarks (‘the Comptroller’). Abraxis is seeking from
the national court the annulment of the Comptroller’s decision to reject the SPC
application made by Abraxis for a combination of substances containing the
active ingredient paclitaxel in the form of nanoparticles bound to albumin
(‘nab-paclitaxel’). Nab-paclitaxel
is protected by European patent (UK) No EP
0961612, which claims composition containing albumin bound paclitaxel
having certain particle size. In the present case, the active ingredient in Abraxane,
paclitaxel, had already been marketed under other brand names for use in
eliminating cancer cells pursuant to earlier marketing authorisations.
Nab-paclitaxel is a new formulation of that active ingredient and has the same
use.
By decision of 26 August 2016, the Comptroller rejected that
application on the grounds that, as that marketing authorisation was not the
first marketing authorisation for paclitaxel, the condition set out in Article
3(d) of Regulation No 469/2009 was not fulfilled. Abraxis appealed the decision
of Comptroller to High Court of Justice (England & Wales), Chancery
Division (Patents Court), United Kingdom. The national court has doubts as to
the scope of Neurim and, accordingly, as to the interpretation of Article
3(d) of Regulation No 469/2009. In those circumstances, that court decided to
stay the proceedings and referred the following question to the CJEU for a
preliminary ruling:
‘Is Article 3(d) of
Regulation No 469/2009 to be interpreted as permitting the grant of an SPC where
the marketing authorisation referred to in Article 3(b) [of that regulation] is
the first authorisation within the scope of the basic patent to place the
product on the market as a medicinal product and where the product is a new
formulation of an old active ingredient?’
CJEU Analysis:
CJEU said that for the purposes of a coherent interpretation
of the provisions of Regulation No 469/2009, the terms used in Article 3(d) of
that regulation must be read by reference to the definitions in Article 1
thereof. In particular, the concept of ‘product’ means, in accordance with
Article 1(b) of that regulation, ‘the active ingredient or combination of
active ingredients of a medicinal product’. According to settled case-law
beginning with Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the concept of ‘active
ingredient’, within the meaning of that provision, excludes those
constituents of a medicinal product which do not have any therapeutic effects
of their own on the body, such as excipients. In the light of that definition
of ‘product’, as set out in Article 1(b) of Regulation No 469/2009, a literal
interpretation of Article 3(d) of that regulation presupposes, as the Court
expressly found in Medeva, that the ‘first authorisation to place the product on
the market as a medicinal product’, within the meaning of that provision, means
the first marketing authorisation for a medicinal product incorporating the
active ingredient or combination of active ingredients at issue. According to
that reading, an SPC can therefore be obtained only on the basis of the first
marketing authorisation covering an active ingredient or a combination of
specific active ingredients. In Neurim however, the Court held that
an SPC could be granted on the basis of that patent and the marketing authorisation
for Circadin since, although it was
not the first marketing authorisation relating to melatonin, it was the first
marketing authorisation covering that active ingredient for a therapeutic use
in human falling within the scope of the protection conferred by the basic
patent.
CJEU however, rejected the “scope of protection of the basic
patent” test & adopted literal meaning of Article 3(d) of that regulation.
CJEU thus held that an SPC application must be rejected where the marketing
authorisation at issue is not the first marketing authorisation for the product
as a medicinal product, irrespective of whether or not that marketing
authorisation is the first to fall within the scope of the protection conferred
by the basic patent. Also the approach adopted by the legislature inevitably
denies the protection of an SPC to certain inventions, such as the formulation
of nab-paclitaxel, which, although they concern a previously authorised
product, constitute genuine therapeutic advances and are subject to a
considerable erosion of the effective duration of the patent by reason of the
procedures to be carried out before commercial exploitation is possible. However,
that finding does not justify the creation by judicial decision of a test
departing from the wording of Article 3(d) of Regulation No 469/2009 and from the
intention of the legislature.
Thus, court gave the following answer to the question
referred by the High Court of Justice (England & Wales), Chancery Division
(Patents Court), United Kingdom:
Article 3(d) of
Regulation (EC) No 469/2009 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 6
May 2009 concerning the supplementary protection certificate for medicinal
products precludes the grant of such a certificate where the marketing
authorisation relied upon in support of the application for a supplementary
protection certificate under Article 3(b) of that regulation is not the first
marketing authorisation for the active ingredient or combination of active ingredients
at issue as a medicinal product. This is so even in a situation, such as that
at issue in the main proceedings, where the marketing authorisation relied upon
is the first to cover the formulation protected by the basic patent relied upon
in support of the application for a supplementary protection certificate under
Article 3(a) of that regulation.
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