On Jan 29, 2020, Federal Circuit reversed & remanded district
court’s decision of patent invalidity based on inherent anticipation.
Galderma is NDA holder for Soolantra®, a
topical pharmaceutical formulation containing 1% ivermectin. It is indicated
for the treatment of inflammatory lesions of rosacea, a skin disorder
characterized by facial flushing and redness. Teva on Dec. 30, 2016 filed ANDA with
FDA seeking to market generic version. Galderma sued Teva for infringement and
asserted claim 12 of the 9,089,587 patent; claims 2, 3, and 6 of the 9,233,117
patent; and claims 6, 7, 10, and 11 of the 9,233,118 patent. The asserted
claims recite methods of treating inflammatory lesions of rosacea through
topical administration of 1% ivermectin once daily to patients with
inflammatory lesions of rosacea. The claims also recite certain efficacy parameters
resulting from the treatment methods.
Teva asserted that the claims at issue were invalid as
anticipated by U.S. Patent No. 5,952,372 (“McDaniel”) or U.S. Patent No.
7,550,440 (“Manetta”). District court after trial issued opinion in favour of
Teva & found asserted claims invalid under anticipation. The district court
found that McDaniel expressly discloses: methods for treatment of rosacea,
including inflammatory lesions; a topical formulation containing about 1–5%
ivermectin; and, once-daily application of ivermectin. It also found that
McDaniel inherently disclosed the claimed efficacy limitations. This finding of
inherency was based on the parties’ stipulation that “Manetta enables McDaniel
in 2012 as to the formulation.” According to district court POSA would have
been able to practice McDaniel’s disclosed treatment method with Manetta’s
formulation (Soolantra formulation)
without undue experimentation.” Because court found all asserted claims
invalid for anticipation, it did not reach Teva’s arguments concerning
obviousness and lack of written description.
On Sep. 6, 2019, Galderma timely filed a notice of appeal. On
appeal, Galderma specifically challenged district court’s (1) use of multiple
references for its anticipation analysis; and (2) finding of inherency based on
“a mere possibility.”
1. Reliance on
Multiple References -
Galderma argued that the district court erred by finding the
asserted claims anticipated based on disclosures found in two references, in
contravention of settled law that anticipation must be based on disclosure in a
single reference. According to Galderma, although the district court was
permitted to look to other references to interpret the allegedly anticipatory
reference, it was strictly prohibited from using additional references “for a
very specific teaching.” Particularly, Galderma argued that the district court
erred by relying on second reference, Manetta for its teaching of the Soolantra
formulation. Galderma further argued
that the district court confused enablement with anticipatory disclosure as Manetta’s
enablement of McDaniel’s formulation only means that a POSA could practice the
general formulations disclosed in McDaniel. It cannot mean that McDaniel
discloses the specific formulation disclosed in Manetta.
Teva argued that the district court’s findings are
consistent with precedent. It argued that disclosure of a genus (here,
McDaniel’s disclosure of a 1–5% ivermectin formulation) can anticipate a
claimed species if a POSA would discern or possess the species (here, the
Soolantra formulation) upon reading the disclosure. According to Teva, Manetta’s
Soolantra is “undoubtedly a species within the scope of McDaniel’s disclosure.”
Federal Circuit said that Teva’s arguments ignore the axiom
that a patent claim can only be invalid for anticipation if a single reference
discloses each and every limitation of the claimed invention. Turning to
another reference “for a very specific teaching” runs afoul of these settled
principles. Dart Indus., 726 F.2d at 727 (rejecting an anticipation challenge where
the challenger relied on two additional articles “for a very specific teaching,
not for any light they shed on what [the anticipatory reference] would have
meant to those skilled in the art”). Here, the district court erred by
finding the asserted claims anticipated by the disclosures of McDaniel and
Manetta, in contravention of settled law. Because teaching of Manetta is
specific one & not a general to shed light on McDaniel disclosure. McDaniel
does not contain the specific disclosure that is necessary for a finding of
anticipation: an ivermectin formulation (such as Soolantra®) that necessarily
achieves the claimed efficacy limitations.
2. Inherency Based on
Mere Possibility –
On appeal, Galderma argued that the district court erroneously
found that McDaniel inherently discloses the claimed efficacy limitations. According
to Galderma, the district court erroneously based this conclusion on the mere
possibility that a POSA would have been able to practice McDaniel’s disclosed
method with Soolantra®. Federal Circuit sided with Galderma & said that the
proper inquiry for inherent anticipation is whether the claimed efficacy
limitations “necessarily result” from practicing McDaniel. District court erred
here because McDaniel does not disclose the “very same composition” as the
patents-in-suit; it only discloses topical ivermectin formulations generally.
The record does not show that practicing McDaniel’s general disclosure of 1%
ivermectin, “formulated into a cosmetically-acceptable topical lotion, cream,
or gel,” necessarily achieves the claimed efficacy limitations. Moreover,
Teva’s own formulation expert testified that formulation parameters such as
excipients can impact drug release, which affects whether a formulation has
“any sort of therapeutic value.”
Federal Circuit thus reversed and remanded for the district
court to consider Teva’s remaining invalidity defenses.