On Jan 08, 2019, Court of The Hague held that there is a real chance
that the SPC will be held invalid in main proceedings & therefore dismissed
the request for a Preliminary Injunction.
G D Searle is the holder of European patent EP 0810209 B1
titled “Alpha – and beta-amino acid hydroxyethylamino sulphonamides useful as
retroviral protease inhibitors”, which generically covers Darunavir. Searle
obtained SPC for the product Prezista® based on EP’209 patent which would
expire on Feb 23, 2019. Sandoz introduced
its generic product in the October 2018 version of the G-Standard and announced
that it would market its product in November 2018. On Oct 23, 2018 Searle sued
Sandoz in before the Court of The Hague requesting a provisional injunction. In
an interim decision of Nov 01, 2018, the PI Judge granted Searle’s provisional
claim.
Sandoz appealed. Sandoz argued that a preliminary injunction should be
denied because there is a real and serious chance that the SPC will be found
invalid in main proceedings as it does not meet the requirement of Article 3
(a) of the SPC-regulation. Judge said that Markush claim can in some circumstances amount to a sufficiently
precise claim for the purposes of Article 3(a), for example where individual
substituents are identified in the specification, or where classes of such
substituents are set out, and the skilled person would be able to determine the
extent of those classes. Therefore it is at least arguable that that
substituent must be amongst those which the skilled person would be able to
identify based on his common general knowledge at the priority date.
The question to be answered in the present proceedings is whether
darunavir satisfies the requirement of Article 3 (a) of SPC, namely whether it
is protected by a basic patent in force (EP 209). The way in which this
condition must be fulfilled has been worked out by the CJEU in the Teva-Gilead
judgment. In order to assess whether an active substance is eligible
for an SPC, the following two step tests - must be completed:
1) Does the product (for which SPC protection is requested) embody the
invention?
2) Is this product 'specifically identifiable' for the person skilled
in the art in light of all the data published by that patent and on the basis
of his general professional knowledge on the date of filing / priority date of
the basic patent ?
Court held that Darunavir satisfies the
requirement of the first test, since in that case the question is whether the
product embodies the invention, or, in the words of the judgment, or the
average person skilled in the art on the basis of his general professional
knowledge and in the light of the description and the drawings of the patent
can unequivocally understand that the product referred to in the claims of the
basic patent is a characteristic that is necessary for the solution of the
technical problem disclosed by that patent.
However, it falls under the second test. Here it is relevant whether
the active substance (darunavir) was 'specifically identifiable' on the
priority date for the average person skilled in the art, using his general
professional knowledge, in the light of all information disclosed by the
patent. Here, a Markush formula of the basic patent covers an unimaginably
large number of substances. In addition, it is not disputed that darunavir compounds
is neither disclosed in the claims nor in the description. It is further
established between the parties that darunavir did not exist on the first date
and that the substance was developed and synthesized only six years later, in
1998. Thus, darunavir was not 'specifically identifiable' for the professional
on the priority date in the light of all the information published by the basic
patent. In view of the foregoing, it cannot be concluded that conclusion 1 of
EP 209 is implicit but necessarily and specifically related to darunavir.
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