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.
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