Saturday, February 23, 2019

Weekly Patent Roundup


Federal Circuit disqualifies Katten from Mylan appeals

The US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit yesterday disqualified law firm Katten Muchin Rosenman from representing Mylan in three appeals before the court. In a precedential decision handed down on February 20, the Federal Circuit ruled that Katten’s representation of subsidiaries of Canadian pharma company Valeant Pharmaceuticals International presented a conflict of interest…..


Accord vs. NPS; District Court of The Hague 6 February 2019 [Cinacalcet]

Shire-NPS Pharmaceuticals Inc. (“NPS”) was the patentee of EP 1 203 761 B1 (“EP 761”) titled “Calcium receptor-active compounds” that was granted on 19 January 2005. The subject matter of EP 761 is, inter alia, the pharmaceutical compound cinacalcet, which is used for the treatment of hypercalcemia and related diseases (in essence, cinacalcet, helps the body maintaining normal calcium levels). On the basis of EP 761, a supplementary protection certificate was granted by the Dutch Patent Office to Amgen for the product Mimpara (the “SPC”) which SPC expires on 25 April 2020…..


Judge Stark on Privilege for Patent Agents [KYPROLIS® (carfilzomib)]

In a Memorandum Order unsealed on February 19, Chief Judge Stark addressed disputes over Plaintiff Onyx’s privilege log. Before making rulings on specific documents reviewed in camera, Judge Stark ruled generally as to the extent of the applicable privilege. Judge Stark first recognized that the Federal Circuit has recognized a privilege between non-attorney patent agents and their clients, but that such a privilege is narrow. Onyx Therapeutics, Inc. v. Cipla Limited, C.A. No. 16-988-LPS….


Amgen Asks Fed. Circ. To Uphold $70M Hospira IP Verdict [EPOGEN® (Epoetin alfa)]

Law360 (February 21, 2019, 4:52 PM EST) -- Amgen Inc. has asked the Federal Circuit to preserve a $70 million jury verdict finding that Hospira’s biosimilar version of the blockbuster anemia treatment Epogen infringed an Amgen patent, saying Hospira...


Indian court says Sinopharm Weiqida’s amoxicillin trihydrate product infringes Centrient patent

Netherlands-based Centrient Pharmaceuticals, a manufacturer of beta-lactam antibiotics, and a provider of next generation statins and anti-fungals, announced that the Delhi High Court in India has granted an injunction against Sinopharm Weiqida Pharmaceuticals and Sinopharm India, restricting the export and/or import into India of its active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) amoxicillin trihydrate……

Wednesday, February 20, 2019

Pregabalin - CJEU


On Feb 14, 2019, Court of Justice of European Union (CJEU) handed down answers to the question related to carve-out or skinny labeling in case of protected indication.

Background:

Warner-Lambert Company (WLC) / Pfizer market the medicinal product Lyrica, whose active ingredient is pregabalin. That medicinal product is intended for the treatment of epilepsy, generalised anxiety disorder and neuropathic pain. WLC was the holder of European Patent EP 0934061 B3, which covered the used of pregabalin for the treatment of, inter alia, neuropathic pain. That patent expired on 17 July 2017. In the Netherlands, the College ter Beoordeling van Geneesmiddelen (Medicinal Product Evaluation Board, ‘the CBG’) is the autonomous administrative body responsible for monitoring and assessing the efficacy, risks and quality of medicinal products. The CBG publishes on its website, inter alia, the terms of the marketing authorisation, the package leaflet and the summary of product characteristics for each medicinal product. During 2015, several producers of generic medicinal products obtained marketing authorisation for pregabalin from the CBG under the decentralised procedure. One of those producers, Aurobindo, informed the CBG, before placing its medicinal product on the market that it intended not to include the package leaflet and the summary of product characteristics in the information relating to the treatment of neuropathic pain. That company asked if it could publish only part of the package leaflet and of the summary of product characteristics, but the CBG refused. WLC brought an action before the rechtbank Den Haag (District Court, The Hague, Netherlands) seeking, in essence, an order that CBG abandon its practice of publishing in full on its website package leaflets and summaries of product characteristics of generic medicinal products and instead publish the edited version of those documents. By judgment of 15 January 2016, the Hague district court upheld WLC’s action concerning pregabalin. On 11 February 2017, the Netherlands State filed an appeal against that judgment with the referring court. WLC also lodged a cross-appeal with that court. Court of appeal then referred the following questions to the CJEU.

1.  Must Article 11 of Directive 2001/83 (1) or any other provision of European Union law be interpreted as meaning that a communication whereby the marketing authorisation applicant or holder for a generic medicine, within the meaning of Article 10 of Directive 2001/83, notifies the authority that he is not including in the Summary of Product Characteristics and the package leaflet those parts of the Summary of Product Characteristics for the reference medicine which refer to indications or dosage forms covered by the patent right of a third party, should be considered as a request to limit the marketing authorisation which must result in the marketing authorisation not applying, or no longer applying, to the patented indications or dosage forms?

2. If the answer to question 1 is in the negative, do Articles 11 and 21(3) of Directive 2001/83 or any other provisions of EU law preclude the competent authority from making public, by means of an authorisation granted under Article 6 in conjunction with Article 10 of Directive 2001/83, the Summary of Product Characteristics and the package leaflet, including those parts which refer to indications or dosage forms which fall under the patent rights of a third party, in a situation where the marketing authorisation applicant or holder has notified the authority that he is not including in the Summary of Product Characteristics and the package leaflet those parts of the Summary of Product Characteristics for the reference medicine which refer to indications or dosage forms covered by the patent right of a third party?

3. Does it make any difference to the answer to question 2 that the competent authority requires the authorisation holder to include in the package leaflet which the authorisation holder must insert in the packaging of the medicine a reference to the authority’s website on which the Summary of Product Characteristics is published, including the parts which refer to indications or dosage forms covered by the patent rights of a third party, whereas those parts, pursuant to Article 11 of Directive 2001/83, are not included in the package leaflet?

CJEU answered the 1st question as affirmative. CJEU said that as an exception to that principle that the marketing authorisation of a generic medicinal product and that of a reference product must tally, the second paragraph of Article 11 of Directive 2001/83 provides, as regards applications for marketing authorisation of generic medicinal products, that ‘those parts of the summary of product characteristics of the reference medicinal product referring to indications or dosage forms which were still covered by patent law at the time when a generic medicine was marketed need not be included’. The rationale behind this exception is not to delay entry on the market of generic medicinal products until expiry of all patents which may include several indications or dosage forms of the reference medicinal product, without any relaxation of the requirements of safety and efficacy which must be met by generic medicinal products (see, to that effect, judgment of 23 October 2014, Olainfarm, C104/13, EU:C:2014:2316, paragraphs 27 and 28).

It is clear from a combined reading of Article 8(3)(j) and the second paragraph of Article 11 of Directive 2001/83 that failure to include in the summary of product characteristics of a generic medicinal product certain indications or dosage forms of the marketing authorisation for the reference medicinal product means that those indications or dosage forms are not covered by the marketing authorisation application. By making use of the option given by the second paragraph of Article 11, the marketing authorisation applicant thus limits the scope of his application and the competent national authority does not have any discretion in that respect, as the Advocate General stated in point 57 of her Opinion.

CJEU also held that having regard to the positive answer given to the first question, there is no need to answer the second & third questions.

Saturday, February 16, 2019

Job Update

................................................................................

Function: IPR-Formulation

Company: Hetero

Location: Hyderabad

Experience: 3-8 years

Qualification: M pharmacy/pharmaceutics

Contact info:
eswar.r@heterodrugs.com

................................................................................

Many thanks to my friend Mr Gaurav Shrangare for sending this job update. If you know or have any vacancy in your IP department then you can drop me an email: mahen_gunjal@yahoo.co.in

Friday, February 15, 2019

Dupilumab - USA


Decision on IPR: Feb 14, 2019

AIA Review
Filing Date
Institution Date
Petitioner
US Patent
Respondent
Final Written Decision
IPR2017-01879
07/28/2017
02/15/2018
Sanofi-Aventis U.S. LLC
8,679,487
Immunex Corp
Claims 1–14, 16, and 17 are patentable
IPR2017-01884
07/28/2017
02/15/2018
Sanofi-Aventis U.S. LLC
8,679,487
Immunex Corp
Claims 1–17 are unpatentable
Previously Sanofi also filed another IPR (IPR2017-01129) on 03/23/2017 which was denied by PTAB.

US 8,679,487 (Immunex Corp) :
1. An isolated human antibody that competes with a reference antibody for binding to human IL-4 interleukin-4 (IL-4) receptor, wherein the light chain of said reference antibody comprises the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO:10 and the heavy chain of said reference antibody comprises the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO:12.

In IPR2017-01884, PTAB was persuaded by Petitioner arguments that a person of ordinary skill in the art would have had a reason to humanize Hart’s MAb230 using Schering-Plough’s humanization technique to create a potential therapeutic for allergic diseases with a reasonable expectation of success. Petitioner’s expert, Dr. Zurawski, explains that a person of ordinary skill in the art would have had a reason to graft the CDRs and other binding-determinant amino acid residues from MAb230 into a human framework according to the teachings of Schering-Plough to “derive a less immunogenic version of MAb230 that could be used as a potential therapeutic.” Thus PTAB concluded that Petitioner has established by a preponderance of the evidence that claims 1–17 of the ’487 patent are unpatentable as obvious over Hart and Schering-Plough.

In IPR2017-01879, PTAB concluded that Petitioner has not established by a preponderance of the evidence that claims 1–14, 16, and 17 of the ’487 patent are unpatentable as anticipated by the ’132 Publication. Specifically, Petitioner has not satisfied its burden to prove the portions of the ’132 Publication relied upon for anticipation (i.e., mAb 6-2) represent the work of another to qualify as prior art under § 102(e).

Simultaneously, EPO on Feb 14, 2019 revoked Immunex's corresponding European patent No. 2,990,420 for insufficiency of disclosure.


Sunday, February 10, 2019

Weekly Patent Roundup


Darunavir in Swedish Preliminary Injunction Proceedings

Recently, the Paris High Court decided for a preliminary injunction against the commercialisation of Darunavir by Sandoz, the SPC Blog report can be found here. In parallel proceedings, the Swedish Patent and Market Appeal Court has come to the opposite conclusion, and found that that the contested SPC would most likely be found invalid and thus denied a request for a preliminary injunction. Hampus Rystedt from Zacco has kindly provided the following summary of the case…..


Report: Jury orders Takeda to pay Bayer $155M over hemophilia drug

A U.S. jury has ordered Takeda Pharmaceutical’s Baxalta unit to pay Bayer AG $155.19 million for infringing a patent related to a Baxalta hemophilia treatment. According to Reuters, jurors in the federal court in Wilmington, Del., reached their verdict on the seventh day of a trial after rejecting Baxalta’s argument that the June 2016 patent on the treatment, Adynovate, was invalid……


Roche denied India patent for powder formulation for anti-HIV drug Valcyte

In a setback to Swiss pharma major F Hoffmann-La Roche (Roche), the Indian patent office has rejected the company’s application for a powder formulation for Valganciclovir, its anti-viral drug for HIV patients sold under brand name Valcyte. The Chennai patent office refused the patent for the formulation on the ground of lack of novelty……


A Second Opposition Is Filed against Janssen’s Patent Application for the Fumarate Salt Form of Bedaquiline

Multiple news outlets recently reported about a pre-grant patent opposition filed by two TB survivors, with support from MSF, against a patent application filed by Janssen for a salt form of its experimental TB drug bedaquiline. In a press note put out by MSF, it was claimed that this opposition “…is the first ever challenge against a TB drug patent in India”. This is a factually incorrect statement…..


Diagnosis: Ineligible

Mayo is involved in another diagnostic method patent dispute — and again has come out on-top with a finding that the asserted patent claims are ineligible under 35 U.S.C. 101. That district court finding has now been affirmed on appeal, although subject to a strong dissent from Judge Newman……


Full Fed. Circ. Won't Review $20M Cialis Marketing Verdict

The full Federal Circuit on Tuesday declined to review whether a panel erred by upholding a $20 million infringement verdict entered in Texas federal court against Eli Lilly & Co. for...


Fed Circuit refusal paves way for Suboxone generics

Rivals of British pharmaceutical company Indivior will soon be able to sell generic versions of opioid addiction treatment Suboxone film (buprenorphine and naloxone) following a ruling of the US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit….

Friday, February 8, 2019

Abatacept – USA


On Feb 07, 2019 Federal Circuit held that Momenta Pharmaceuticals challenge to Orencia® patent is moot because Momenta have stopped developing a biosimilar version of product.

Momenta appealed the decision of PTAB which found patentability of all claims 1 to 15 of US 8,476,239  owned by Bristol-Myers Squibb Company (“BMS”). The ’239 Patent, entitled “Stable Protein Formulations,” describes and claims specific fluid formulations of the protein molecule CTLA4Ig, an immunosuppressive agent used in treatment of immune system disorders such as rheumatoid arthritis.

Momenta in July 2015 petitioned for Inter Partes Review (IPR) of the ’239 Patent. At that time Momenta was reportedly attempting to develop a biosimilar counterpart of Orencia®. The PTAB instituted review, conducted trial, and sustained patentability of the ’239 Patent claims. Momenta filed an appeal to the Federal Circuit, as provided by 35 U.S.C. § 319. BMS moved to dismiss the appeal, stating that Momenta does not have standing to invoke federal court jurisdiction, citing the constitutional requirements of Article III. BMS stated that Momenta’s proposed product had failed its Phase 1 clinical trials and had been withdrawn. Momenta responded that it had not abandoned its intent to produce a counterpart of the Orencia® product, that the ’239 Patent is an obstacle to these activities, and that it is injured by the estoppel provision, 35 U.S.C. § 315(e). Momenta stated that this appeal meets the criteria of Article III, citing the “relaxed” standard for Article III compliance when the right of appeal is established by statute.

On Oct 1, 2018, Momenta filed a Letter stating that it is in discussion with Mylan to exit its participation in the development of its other five biosimilar programs including M834, a proposed biosimilar to ORENCIA®.  After shoe cause notice by Court, Momenta responded on Nov 2, 2018, stating that the appeal was not moot because as of today, the companies continue to be jointly responsible under that agreement for product development and for sharing the costs of that development. Momenta included a Declaration of its Chief Business Officer, Young Kwon, who declared that “[t]he parties have not yet reached an understanding about whether or when any termination notice will be delivered,” BMS responded that a third party’s possible future development of this abandoned product does not provide constitutional standing to Momenta. BMS stated that Momenta’s “possible future royalty . . . is too speculative to support standing,” On Dec 10, 2018 BMS filed another Letter and a Form 8-K stating that Momenta has terminated collaboration agreement with Mylan with respect to the development of . . . M834, a proposed biosimilar to ORENCIA® . . . . BMS stated that these documents confirm Momenta’s lack of or loss of standing, and establish that the appeal is moot. Momenta has not responded, and have not withdrawn its appeal.
Federal Circuit said that although the statutory grant of judicial review may “relax” the Article III criteria, judicial review of agency action remains subject to the constitutional foundation of injury-in-fact. On abandoning development of this product, Momenta has no legally protected interest in the validity of the ’239 Patent, and there is no “real need to exercise the power of judicial review.” 

Momenta’s argument that it might at some future time receive a royalty from Mylan, if Mylan should produce an Orencia® biosimilar, has no support in precedent, See Clapper, 568 U.S. at 414 n.5. Even though Momenta may have been working in pursuit of potentially infringing activity, it is established that jurisdiction must exist throughout the judicial review, and an intervening abandonment of the controversy produces loss of jurisdiction. See Arizonans for Official English v. Arizona, 520 U.S. 43, 67 (1997). Standing and mootness may not be coextensive in all cases. However, when the potential for injury has been mooted by events, the federal courts are deprived of jurisdiction. If a case does not “present a ‘case or controversy’ due to developments during litigation, those claims become moot.”

Thus, Federal Circuit held that Momenta does not have standing to invoke federal appellant jurisdiction, and the appeal is mooted by Momenta’s discontinuance of any potentially infringing activity.

Wednesday, February 6, 2019

Cabazitaxel - USA


On Feb 05, 2019, Federal Circuit vacated & remanded PTAB’s invalidation of proposed amended claims of a method-of-use patent, finding the board improperly placed the burden of proof on Sanofi to establish that its proposed claims were patentable and applied the wrong claim construction in its analysis.

This appeal involves U.S. Patent No. 8,927,592 (expiring on 04/27/2031 with PED), claims method for treatment of castration resistant metastatic prostate cancer with cabazitaxel & corticoid. In an inter partes review requested by Mylan PTAB invalidated claims 1–5 and 7–30 of the ’592 patent. The Board also denied Sanofi’s contingent motion to amend claims 27–30. Specifically, on Dec 23, 2016, Sanofi filed an opposed motion to amend its claims by substituting proposed claims 31–34 for claims 27–30. (“If original Claim 27 is found unpatentable, the Board is requested to replace it with proposed substitute Claim 31.”). Proposed substitute claim 31 recites:

31. A method of increasing survival comprising administering to a patient in need thereof (i) an antihistamine, (ii) a corticoid, (iii) an H2 antagonist, and (iv) a dose of 20 to 25 mg/m2 of cabazitaxel, or a hydrate or solvate thereof, wherein said antihistamine, said corticoid, and said H2 antagonist are administered prior to said dose of 20 to 25 mg/m2 of cabazitaxel, or hydrate or solvate thereof, in combination with prednisone or prednisolone, wherein said patient has castration resistant or hormone refractory, metastatic prostate cancer that has progressed during or after treatment with docetaxel.

Proposed claim 31, like claim 27, requires administering cabazitaxel, in combination with prednisone or prednisolone, to a patient with castration resistant or hormone refractory metastatic prostate cancer who has progressed during or after treatment with docetaxel. But, as the Board noted, “[s]ubstitute claim 31 amends the preamble [of claim 27] to recite a ‘method of increasing survival’ followed by ‘comprising administering to a patient in need thereof.’ Proposed claim 31 also limits claim 27 by requiring the administration of an antihistamine, a corticoid, and an H2 antagonist prior to administering the cabazitaxel.

On Sep 21, 2017, the Board issued its final written decision. First, the Board invalidated claims 1–5 and 7–30 of the ’592 patent for obviousness. Sanofi has not appealed this aspect of the Board’s decision. Sanofi appealed the Board’s denial of its motion to amend the claims & improper burden of proof to show that its proposed claims would be patentable. In addressing Sanofi’s motion, the Board concluded that the preamble of proposed claim 31 was the only phrase requiring explicit construction. Sanofi argued that the preamble—“[a] method of increasing survival”— was a “statement of intentional purpose for how the method is to be performed.” The Board disagreed, distinguishing Jansen in favor of Bristol–Myers Squibb Co. v. Ben Venue Laboratories, Inc., 246 F.3d 1368, 1375–78 (Fed. Cir. 2001). (“Bristol–Myers Squibb is relevant precedent and stands for the proposition that a method of treatment preamble stating the intended purpose of the treatment does not impose a result limitation on the recited method step.”). The Board, therefore, concluded that the preamble of proposed claim 31 should not be treated as limiting because it merely provides “additional description,” as in Bristol-Myers Squibb, rather than an “intentional purpose for how the treatment method is to be practiced.” Sanofi also invited the Board to treat its claim construction arguments as a disclaimer, but the Board declined to do so. On the merits, Sanofi argued “that the prior art d[id] not disclose or suggest that 20–25 mg/m2 of cabazitaxel in combination with prednisone or prednisolone would increase overall survival,” as required by the preamble to claim 31. The Board rejected this argument based on its construction of proposed claim 31, i.e. that the preamble was not limiting.

Burden of Proof:

Federal Circuit said that in an inter partes review, the petitioner bears the burden of proving that proposed amended claims are unpatentable. Aqua Prods., 872 F.3d at 1327–28. But in deciding whether Sanofi could amend its claims here, the Board expressly required Sanofi to prove that its proposed substitute claims were patentable. This was an error. Even so, Mylan maintains that the Board’s error was harmless because the Board “found that [Mylan] satisfied the burden of showing the proposed substitute claims are unpatentable by a preponderance of the evidence.”  While the Board at times suggested Mylan had “established” certain facts, it also noted other failures of proof and gaps in Mylan’s expert testimony. Federal Circuit, therefore, vacated the Board’s denial of Sanofi’s contingent motion to amend and remanded for proceedings consistent with its decision in Aqua Products.

Claim Construction:

Federal Circuit reviewed the Board’s conclusions of law de novo and its findings of fact for substantial evidence. Federal Circuit said that a claim’s preamble may be limiting “if it recites essential structure or steps, or if it is ‘necessary to give life, meaning, and vitality’ to the claim.” Catalina Mktg. Int'l, Inc. v. Coolsavings.com, Inc., 289 F.3d 801, 808 (Fed. Cir. 2002). But, generally, “a preamble is not limiting ‘where a patentee defines a structurally complete invention in the claim body and uses the preamble only to state a purpose or intended use for the invention.’” (quoting Rowe v. Dror, 112 F.3d 473, 478 (Fed. Cir. 1997)). Sanofi argued that the preamble of proposed claim 31 is limiting based on decisions in Rapoport v. Dement, 254 F.3d 1053 (Fed. Cir. 2001) as it articulated the “purpose for which the method must be performed.” The phrase here “patient in need thereof” from proposed claim 31 relies on the preamble for antecedent basis. And, as in Jansen, the preamble expresses the “intentional purpose [—increasing survival—] for which the method must be performed. Federal Circuit, therefore, “interpreted the nearly parallel language in the [’592] patent claims in the same way.” Federal Circuit further said that this is also consistent with the specification of the ’529 patent, which emphasizes increasing survival as an important aspect of the invention. The Board, thus erred by treating the preamble here as non-limiting.

Previously by an order of Dec 17, 2017, New Jersey district court found US’ 529 claims 7, 11, 14, 15, 16, 21, 26, and 30 invalid & claims 1 and 2 valid and infringed by Defendants’ proposed generic products (reported here on this blog). The said decision is under appeal at CAFC.

Tuesday, February 5, 2019

Job Update


Function: IPR-Formulation

Company: Pharma

Location: Chennai

Experience: 1-5 years

Qualification: M pharmacy/pharmaceutics

Contact info:
rsathish@caplinpoint.net

................................................................................

Function: IPR-Formulation

Company: Pharma

Location: Mumbai

Experience: 10-12 years

Position: Manager

Qualification: M pharmacy/pharmaceutics

Contact info:
abhilasha@topgearconsultants.com

................................................................................

Many thanks to my friend Mr Tushar Rane for sending this job update. If you know or have any vacancy in your IP department then you can drop me an email: mahen_gunjal@yahoo.co.in

Monday, February 4, 2019

Lacosamide – USA


On Feb 01, 2019 Federal Circuit affirmed PTAB’s decision of upholding the compound patent on epileptic drug Vimpat® challenged by three generic-drug makers.

Mylan, Breckenridge and Alembic appealed from the final written decision of the PTAB in an inter partes review concluding that claims 1–13 of U.S. Reissue Patent 38,551 (“the ’551 patent”) are not unpatentable. Research Corporation Technologies, Inc. (“RCT”) owns the ’551 patent, which discloses and claims enantiomeric compounds and pharmaceutical compositions useful in the treatment of epilepsy and other central nervous system (“CNS”) disorders. Claim 1 recites the lacosamide compound generically in R configuration. Claim 8 depends from claim 1 and recites “[t]he compound according to claim 1 which is (R)-N-benzyl-2-acetamido-3- methoxypropionamide,” referred to in the patent as “BAMP” and referred to herein as lacosamide.

On Nov. 23, 2015, Argentum Pharmaceuticals LLC filed IPR against ’551 patent. In its petition, Argentum challenged claims 1–13 on eight grounds. The Board only instituted on two grounds involving three references: (1) obviousness of claims 1–9 over Kohn 1991 and Silverman and (2) obviousness of claims 10–13 over Kohn 1991, Silverman, and U.S. Patent 5,378,729 (“the ’729 patent”). Three days after the Board instituted Argentum’s petition, Mylan, Breckenridge, and Alembic each filed their own petitions for review with concurrent motions for joinder. The Board issued its final written decision, concluding that each challenged claim had not been shown to be unpatentable. Contrary to its views in the institution decision, the Board disagreed with Petitioners. It “assumed arguendo, that an ordinary artisan would have selected compound 3l of Kohn 1991 as a lead compound” but found that converting the methoxyamino group (NH-O-CH3 ) would have been viewed as undesirable because the compounds in Kohn 1991 without a methoxyamino or nitrogen-containing moiety at the α-carbon had reduced activity.


The Board also credited evidence suggesting that an ordinary artisan would have understood the methoxyamino moiety to confer significant activity to the compound and that substitution of nitrogen for carbon would have led to a significantly different conformation and biological activity. While the Board “acknowledge[d] Silverman’s teaching . . . that bioisosterism has been shown to be useful to attenuate toxicity in lead compounds,” it found a lack of “specific evidence suggesting an ordinary artisan would have understood that modifying the methoxyamino group of Kohn 1991’s compound 3l would have reduced that compound’s toxicity.” Proceeding to the second ground relating to the dependent claims Board concluded that independent claim 1 would not have been obvious over Kohn 1991 and Silverman, the Board reasoned that it could not conclude that the more limited dependent claims 10–13, the only claims at issue in the second ground, would have been obvious. Of the four petitioners, Mylan, Breckenridge and Alembic appealed. RCT challenges whether Appellants have standing to challenge the Board’s decision.

STANDING:

RCT did not assert that Appellants lack Article III standing. However, RCT submitted that each Appellant lacks standing because it does not fall within the zone of interests of 35 U.S.C. § 319. According to RCT, Appellants fall outside that zone because RCT brought an infringement action against each Appellant more than a year before it filed its IPR petition, and each Appellant’s petition was therefore time-barred. In its institution and joinder decision, the Board exercised its discretion to join each Appellant as a party to Argentum’s IPR as permitted by 35 U.S.C. § 315(c). RCTs argument was that the initial Petitioner, Argentum, would have lacked Article III standing to appeal the Board’s decision, because “its IPR was limited to an agency matter.”

Federal Circuit said that a statutory cause of action extends only to litigants that “fall within the zone of interests protected by the law invoked.” Lexmark Int’l, Inc. v. Static Control Components, Inc., 572 U.S. 118, 129 (2014) (quoting Allen v. Wright, 468 U.S. 737, 751 (1984)). The “zone of interests” limitation “always applies and is never negated.” To determine whether an appellant falls within the zone of interests, we apply traditional principles of statutory interpretation, asking not “whether in our judgment Congress should have authorized [the appeal], but whether Congress in fact did so.” Federal circuit further said that Section 315 contemplates the joining of petitioners as “parties.” Section 319 then provides that “[a] party dissatisfied with the final written decision” of the Board “may appeal the decision pursuant to sections 141 through 144. Any party to the inter partes review shall have the right to be a party to the appeal.” Joined parties, as provided in § 315, may appeal pursuant to § 319. Accepting RCT’s argument would require us to read the word “party” differently between § 315 and § 319, an argument for which RCT provides no support. Accordingly, Federal circuit concluded that Appellants fall within the zone of interests of § 319 and are not barred from appellate review.

MERITS:

On the merits, Appellants challenged the Board’s non-obviousness conclusion. Regarding claims 1–9, Appellants asserted a lead compound analysis, proposing compound 3l in Kohn 1991 as the lead. In its final written decision, the Board did not resolve whether compound 3l was an appropriate lead compound. Instead, it accepted compound 3l as the lead and concluded that Petitioners did not meet their burden to establish a motivation to modify that compound. For this analysis, federal circuit assumed, as the Board did, that compound 3l was an appropriate lead compound.

Appellants first argued that an ordinary artisan would have recognized the methoxyamino group in compound 3l to be uncommon and to have potential synthetic and stability problems. According to Appellants, a person of skill in the art would then have been motivated to modify compound 3l by replacing the amine of its methoxyamino group with a methylene link to yield a more stable, synthetically accessible, pharmaceutically common and acceptable moiety. In proposing this modification, Appellants rely on the principles of bioisosterism as recited in Silverman. Appellants submitted that, of the “classical bioisosteres” in Silverman, only methylene would result in a more pharmaceutically common and acceptable compound and resolve the potential stability and synthesis concerns presented by the methoxyamino moiety. Appellants maintained that Silverman would have motivated a person of skill in the art to replace the amine in the methoxyamino group with a methylene link and have a reasonable expectation of success having done so. Appellants further contend that their proposed modification to compound 3l would have been expected to have excellent potency. Specifically, Appellants pointed to Kohn 1991’s teaching that a terminal methoxy group added to compound 3a resulted in compound 3l, which was ten times more potent than compound 3a. As a final point, Appellants argued that a person of skill in the art would have had reason to isolate the R enantiomer from its “racemic lacosamide” mixture because Kohn 1991 teaches that the “anticonvulsant activity resided primarily with the R stereoisomer.”

Federal Circuit however, agreed with RCT that the Board’s findings are supported by substantial evidence. Even if a person of skill in the art would have been motivated to modify compound 3l, the record evidence suggests that compounds without a methoxyamino or nitrogen-containing group at the αcarbon had reduced activity. The evidence also suggests that replacing the methoxyamino in compound 3l would have yielded a different conformation. Such a conformational change may have affected interaction with receptors and altered biological activity. Kohn 1991 itself explains that “stringent steric and electronic requirements exist for maximal anticonvulsant activity,” which would counsel against modifying compound 3l in a way that would change its conformation significantly. The Board also was entitled to reject bioisosterism as a basis for a motivation to modify compound 3l. While Silverman does disclose that that bioisosterism may be useful to attenuate toxicity in a lead compound, the record does not indicate why bioisosterism would have been used to modify compound 3l in particular, which already had a high potency and low toxicity, and why methylene was a natural isostere of methoxyamino. In light of the reductions in potency and the significant conformational changes that would have been expected, the Board’s finding that a person of skill in the art would not have been motivated to modify the methoxy amino group in compound 3l was supported by substantial evidence. As Appellants did not meet their burden to show that claims 1–9 would have been obvious over Kohn 1991 and Silverman, federal circuit concluded that the Board did not err in concluding that Appellants failed to meet their obviousness burden regarding claims 10–13, which depend therefrom.

Thus, Federal Circuit affirmed the Board’s conclusion that Appellants have failed to show that claims 8–13 would have been obvious.

Previously, on May 23, 2018, Federal Circuit affirmed a Delaware court's finding that a UCB Inc's same patent is not invalid (reported here on this blog).

Sunday, February 3, 2019

Job Update

................................................................................
Function: IPR-API

Company: Alembic

Location: Baroda

Experience: 3-4 years

Qualification: M pharmacy/chemistry

Contact info:
ganeshorcrd@gmail.com

................................................................................

Function: IPR-Formulation

Company: Fresenius Kabi

Location: Gurgaon

Experience: 2-4 years

Qualification: M pharmacy/pharmaceutics

Contact info:
pk.patel6370@gmail.com

................................................................................

Many thanks to my friend Mr Gaurav Shrangare for sending this job update. If you know or have any vacancy in your IP department then you can drop me an email: mahen_gunjal@yahoo.co.in

Friday, February 1, 2019

Daratumumab - USA


On Jan 28, 2019, Delaware court granted summary judgment as to noninfringement of the human antibody claims; granted-in-part and denied-in-part summary judgment of invalidity for lack of written description; granted summary judgment of invalidity for lack of enablement and denied summary judgment of invalidity for indefiniteness.

MorphoSys alleged infringement of U.S. Patent Nos. 8,263,746, 9,200,061, and 9,758,590. The asserted patents describe antibodies that can be used to treat blood cancer. The patents describe antibodies that bind to CD38, thus causing the destruction of the cancerous cells. Janssen produces an antibody drug; Darzalex® (“daratumumab”) that MorphoSys contends infringes the asserted patents.

Noninfringement:

Some of the asserted claims are directed to solely “human” antibodies, while other asserted claims are directed to “human or humanized” antibodies. Based on the claim constructions, in order for an antibody to be “human,” it must not be any of the following: (i) chimeric, (ii) humanized, and (iii) derived even in part from a nonhuman species.  Janssen moved for summary judgment of non-infringement of the “human” antibody claims, contending that daratumumab is not a “human” antibody either literally or under the doctrine of equivalents.  Janssen argued that daratumumab is “humanized” and not “human.” Specifically, Janssen argued that “human” and “humanized” are mutually exclusive therefore non-infringement of the “human” claims can be determined as a matter of law. The Court agreed with Janssen that no reasonable juror could conclude that daratumumab is a human antibody. This conclusion follows from the Court’s claim construction and undisputed facts. The Court concluded that an antibody produced using a transgenic mouse is a humanized antibody because it is, as any reasonable factfinder would conclude, “from (either in whole or in part) a nonhuman species.”

MorphoSys contended that even if the “human” antibody claims are not literally infringed, they are infringed under the doctrine of equivalents. Janssen argued that the doctrine of equivalents does not apply for three reasons: (1) the disclosure-dedication rule; (2) the specific exclusion principle; and (3) prosecution history estoppel. In the view of Janssen, the patents note that humanized antibodies could be made from transgenic mice but do not claim (in the relevant claims) such antibodies. MorphoSys counters that the “disclosure-dedication rule” does not apply because the patents do not describe “humanized” antibodies as an alternative to “human” antibodies. But the court concluded that the disclosure-dedication doctrine applies here. A person of ordinary skill reading the patent would identify humanized antibodies as an alternative to human antibodies. Therefore, having claimed only human antibodies in some claims, MorphoSys cannot now argue that those claims should also cover humanized antibodies under the doctrine of equivalents. Under the “specific exclusion” principle, the doctrine of equivalents cannot broaden a claim to cover a feature that is “the opposite of, or inconsistent with, the recited limitation.” The Court concluded that humanized antibodies are specifically excluded from the claims directed solely to human antibodies. This conclusion follows logically from MorphoSys’ admission; given that a human antibody cannot also be a humanized antibody (and vice versa), the terms are “inconsistent with each other.” Moreover, a holding that humanized antibodies were equivalent to human antibodies would render the claim term “human or humanized” redundant. Therefore, daratumumab is specifically excluded from the “human” antibody claims. Thus the Court found that both disclosure-dedication and specific exclusion apply here and therefore will not reach the issue of prosecution history estoppel.

Invalidity: Written Description

Janssen contended that the claims lack sufficient written description because the patents fail to disclose (1) any species of the “Binding Claims” (2) sufficiently “representative species” for any claimed genus and (3) “common structural features” sufficient to visualize or recognize the claimed genera. With respect to Binding claims court said that there are genuine disputes of material fact that preclude summary judgment of lack of written description for the Binding claims. A reasonable factfinder could find that peptide mapping was recognized as sufficiently reliable to demonstrate possession to a POSA. Based on the record evidence, a reasonable factfinder – taking the evidence in the light most favorable to MorphoSys – could find that Figure 7 of the patents conveys possession, notwithstanding the x-ray crystallography data and the Replitope Report. With respect to Representative species court said that there are genuine issues of material fact that preclude summary judgment here. For example, a reasonable factfinder could find that the four disclosed antibodies are representative of all known members of the claimed genera, including daratumumab. Therefore, the Court denied this portion of Janssen’s summary judgment motion. With respect to Common structural features court agreed with Janssen & said that patents fail to disclose any structural elements that would “inform one of skill how to identify antibodies possessing the claimed properties.” The claims “cover any and all CD38 antibodies that satisfy broad functional tests, yet the specification does not teach the necessary correlation between those claimed functional properties (i.e., binding within specific locations or different cell-killing activities) and the structural characteristics (e.g., the amino acid sequence) of antibodies having those properties.” Indeed, multiple MorphoSys witnesses admit that an antibody’s sequence cannot be used to predict its binding properties. Given the undisputed lack of a known relationship between an antibody’s structure (its sequence) and its function (its binding properties), the only reasonable conclusion is that the specification does not sufficiently disclose structural features common to the members of the genus. Thus court granted summary judgment with respect to the “structural features” prong of the written description issue.

Invalidity: Enablement

“To be enabling, the specification of a patent must teach those skilled in the art how to make and use the full scope of the claimed invention without undue experimentation.” Court said that any reasonable factfinder would have to find that very many unique anti-CD38 antibodies exist. Dr. Bradbury “very conservative[ly]” estimates that there are 1019 (ten quintillion) anti-CD38 antibodies. Each of the asserted claims limits the recited human anti-CD38 antibodies in multiple ways. According to Dr. Bradbury’s estimates, which he characterizes as “very conservative,” the most limiting claim (claim 3 of the ‘590 patent) would cover 0.5% of all human anti-CD38 antibodies. It follows that any reasonable factfinder would have to find that each claim covers a very large number of antibodies. Moreover, “Non-conservative” variants of known antibodies would have to be screened to determine their effectiveness. And obtaining antibodies within the claims that are not conservative variants of disclosed antibodies would require substantial time and effort by a POSA.

Applying the Wands factors, the Court concluded that undue experimentation would be needed to practice the full scope of the claimed invention. First, with respect to “the quantity of experimentation necessary,” the Court finds that obtaining antibodies within the claims (other than conservative variants of disclosed antibodies) would require substantial time and effort by a POSA. Turning to “the amount of direction or guidance presented” and “the presence or absence of working examples,” the specifications are largely unhelpful. Although the patents provide four working examples, they do not teach a POSA how to predict from an antibody’s sequence whether it will bind to CD38. Nor do the patents improve a POSA’s ability to discover any of the countless antibodies within the scope of the claims that are not a conservative variant of a disclosed antibody. Rather, a POSA attempting to obtain a claimed antibody that is not a variant of a known antibody would have to do essentially the same amount of work as the inventors of the patents-in-suit; like the inventors, a POSA would have to discover these antibodies de novo through phage display or another technique. The specifications’ deficiencies are particularly acute in view of the next four factors: “the nature of the invention,” “the state of the prior art,” “the relative skill of those in the art,” and “the predictability or unpredictability of the art.” Turning to the final factor, the Court finds that “the breadth of the claims” here is vast. There are a very large number of anti-CD38 antibodies, and a very large number of them meet the claims’ other limitations. For all of these reasons, application of the Wands factors leads the Court to conclude that the claims are not enabled. The Court thus granted Janssen’s motion for summary judgment of invalidity for lack of enablement.

Invalidity: Indefiniteness

Janssen contended that the Binding Claims are indefinite because the patents do not make sufficiently clear which measurement technique to use to determine whether an antibody meets the binding properties recited by the Binding Claims. Janssen specifically contended that a POSA would not use PepSpot to measure binding because “there is no dispute that PepSpot cannot definitively measure binding to the actual CD38 protein.” In support of this contention, Janssen relies on binding data for MOR03080 from the Replitope Report and Janssen’s x-ray crystallography experiment, which Janssen argues shows the inaccuracy of peptide mapping techniques like PepSpot. Court held that Janssen’s extrinsic evidence – which would have been unavailable to a POSA at the pertinent date of the patent – is not relevant to the indefiniteness inquiry as the intrinsic evidence unambiguously conveys to a POSA that epitope mapping techniques like PepSpot can be used to measure an antibody’s binding properties. Therefore, Janssen has failed to meet its burden to show, by clear and convincing evidence, that the Binding Claims are indefinite.