On May 09, 2019 Delaware Court granted Slayback’s motion for
judgment on pleadings that its NDA does not infringe Eagle’s patents under
Doctrine of Equivalents (DOE).
Eagle is the holder of NDA for BALRAPZO® (bendamustine) that
was approved by FDA to treat patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia and
indolent B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Eagle sued Slayback Pharma alleging
infringement under the doctrine of equivalents of four patents: U.S. Patent
Nos. 9,265,831, 9,572,796, 9,572,797 and 10,010,533 (all expiring on
01/28/2031). Eagle initiated this lawsuit in response to Slayback's submission
of NDA No. 212209 for approval to manufacture and sell before the four asserted
patents expire. All the independent claims of the patents require the presence
of three limitations in the claimed pharmaceutical composition: (I)
bendamustine or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof; (2) a
pharmaceutically acceptable fluid that contains some combination of two
solvents: propylene glycol and polyethylene glycol; and (3) a stabilizing
amount of an antioxidant.
Slay back's motion focuses on the second claim limitation-a
pharmaceutically acceptable fluid that contains some combination of propylene
glycol and polyethylene glycol. Slayback's proposed bendamustine drug
contains polyethylene glycol, but instead of propylene glycol it uses another,
second solvent. Eagle alleges that Slayback's drug infringes the solvent
limitation under the doctrine of equivalents. Slayback had moved to dismiss on
the ground that the so-called disclosure-dedication
doctrine bars application of the doctrine of equivalents to the solvent
limitation.
Court’s analysis:
The sole issue was whether, under the disclosure-dedication
doctrine, the asserted patents' disclosure of Slayback' s second solvent as an
alternative to propylene glycol bars Eagle from claiming that Slayback's drug
infringes the solvent limitation under the doctrine of equivalents. Court said
that under the disclosure-dedication doctrine, a patentee can disclaim an
equivalent by disclosing the equivalent in the written description but not
claiming it. [SanDisk Corp. v. Kingston
Tech. Co., 695 F.3d 1348, 1363 (Fed. Cir. 2012)]. Furthermore, "before
unclaimed subject matter is deemed to have been dedicated to the public, that
unclaimed subject matter must have been identified by the patentee as an
alternative to a claim limitation."[Pfizer,
Inc. v. Teva Pharm. USA, Inc., 429 F.3d 1364, 1379 (Fed. Cir. 2005)].
Court said that the written description of the asserted
patents explicitly and repeatedly identifies Slayback's second solvent as an
alternative to propylene glycol in embodiments of the patented invention:
“In other aspects of the invention, the bendamustine containing
compositions include a) a pharmaceutically acceptable fluid which contains one
or more of propylene glycol, ethanol, polyethylene glycol, benzyl alcohol and
glycofurol, and b) a stabilizing amount of a chloride salt”.
Despite these disclosures, Eagle made two arguments against
applying the disclosure-dedication doctrine. First, it contends that the
Federal Circuit's decision in “Nalco Co.
v. Chem-Mod, LLC, 883 F. 3d 1337 (Fed. Cir. 2018)” prohibits application of
the disclosure-dedication doctrine at the Rule 12(c) stage. Second, Eagle argues
that it would be inappropriate to grant Slayback's motion at this time because
Slayback has not shown that a person of ordinary skill in the art (POSITA)
would understand the patents' written description to teach the use of
Slayback's second solvent as an alternative to propylene glycol in the claimed
formulation.
Court denied both the arguments. With respect to first
argument court said that, Nalco does not prohibit the Court from applying the
Disclosure-Dedication Doctrine at the Rule 12(c) stage because Nalco did not
address the disclosure-dedication doctrine & Nalco did not hold that all
"questions over the proper interpretation of a patent's intrinsic record
are 'not suitable' and 'particularly inappropriate' for resolution on a motion
to dismiss." With respect to second
argument court said that, Eagle's attempt to confine the disclosure-dedication
doctrine to cases where an alleged infringer's exact formulation is disclosed
in the written description, however, is contrary to established Federal Circuit
precedent. Under Federal Circuit law, the disclosure-dedication doctrine
applies to unclaimed subject matter that is "identified by the patentee as
an alternative to a claim limitation." In this case, the solvent
limitation is the claim limitation at issue, and the written description of the
asserted patents repeatedly identifies Slayback's second solvent as an
alternative to one of the two solvents recited in that limitation (i.e.,
propylene glycol).
Court thus finally held that it would be clear to a POSITA
that the asserted patents disclose Slayback's second solvent as an alternative
to propylene glycol, a claim limitation found in each of the independent
claims. Therefore, Eagle is barred by the disclosure-dedication doctrine from
alleging, based on Slayback's substitution of Slayback's second solvent for
propylene glycol, that Slayback's proposed bendamustine drug product infringes
the solvent claim limitation under the doctrine of equivalents.
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