Wednesday, February 26, 2020

Diclofenac – USA


On Feb 25, 2020, Full Federal Circuit denied Horizon’s petition for en banc rehearing over indefiniteness ruling.

Previously on Oct 10, 2019, Federal Circuit affirmed district court’s decision on obviousness and indefiniteness. You can read the summary “reported here on this blog”. Specifically, District Court & Federal Circuit found the term “consisting essentially of” invalid as indefinite. Court said that “consisting essentially of” covers only the specified elements and those that do not materially affect the basic and novel properties of the claimed invention. Here, “better drying time” is basic and novel properties of the claimed invention & it does not properly defined in the specification. Because two different methods mentioned in the specification for evaluating “better drying time” do not provide consistent results at consistent times. Therefore, POSA would not know under what standard to evaluate the drying rate. Thus, court concluded that the phrase “consisting essentially of” was indefinite based on its finding that the basic and novel property of “better drying time” was indefinite on this record.

In en banc petition, Horizon argued that panel erred in holding that the claims reciting “consisting essentially of” are indefinite because the basic and novel properties that the specification indicates the claimed composition possess are indefinite. Judge Lourie joined by Judges Newman, O’Malley, and Stoll expressed their dissent over denial of petition. Judge Lourie said that better drying time is not in the claim, and it is the claims that the statute requires be definite. The “consisting essentially of” language connotes that those specified are the claim’s essential ingredients, but it is not closed to others. The word “essential” is key. The possibility of inclusion of others, implied by the language at issue here, does not make what is recited and essential indefinite.

Tuesday, February 25, 2020

Neridronic acid - USA

Decision on PGR: Feb 25, 2020

AIA Review
Filing Date
Institution Date
Petitioner
US Patent
Respondent
FINAL WRITTEN DECISION
PGR2018-00092
08/21/2018
02/25/2019
Grunenthal GmbH
9,820,999
Antecip Bioventures II LLC
Some Challenged Claims Unpatentable

US  9,820,999 (ANTECIP BIOVENTURES II LLC; Exp: May 15, 2034): Non-OB

1. A method of treating pain associated with complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) comprising selecting a human being having CRPS triggered by bone fracture and administering neridronic acid or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof to the human being, wherein the treatment is effective in reducing pain.

Asserted Grounds of Unpatentability:

Claims
35 U.S.C.
Reference(s)/Basis

1–4, 9, 10, 12, 14, 16–18, 23–25, 27–29
102(a)
Varenna 2012
1–4, 9, 10, 12, 14, 16–18, 23–25, 27–29
102(a)
Varenna 2016
1–4, 9, 10, 12, 14, 16–18, 24–25, 27–29
102(a)
Manara
1–4, 9–20, 22–29
103(a)
Varenna 2012, Varenna 2016, Manara, Bruehl
Gatti, La Montagna, and
Muratore
5–8, 21
103(a)
Varenna 2012, Varenna 2016,
Manara, and Manicourt
30
103(a)
Varenna 2012, Varenna 2016
Manara, Schwarzer, Bruehl,
Gatti, La Montagna, and Muratore
1–30
112(a),
Enablement



Order:

It is ORDERED that claims 1–4, 9, 10, 12, 14, 16–18, 23–25, and 27–29 of the ’999 patent are unpatentable;

FURTHER ORDERED that claims 5–8, 11, 13, 15, 19–22, 26, and 30 of the ’999 patent are not shown to be unpatentable.

Friday, February 21, 2020

Fremanezumab / Galcanezumab - USA


IPR decision: Feb 18, 2020

AIA Review #
Filing Date
Institution Date
Petitioner
Patent
Respondent
FINAL WRITTEN DECISION
IPR2018-01422
08/08/2018
02/19/2019
Eli Lilly and Company
9,340,614
Teva Pharma
Challenged Claims Unpatentable
IPR2018-01423
08/08/2018
02/19/2019
Eli Lilly and Company
9,266,951
Teva Pharma
Challenged Claims Unpatentable
IPR2018-01424
08/08/2018
02/19/2019
Eli Lilly and Company
9,346,881
Teva Pharma
Challenged Claims Unpatentable
IPR2018-01425
08/08/2018
02/25/2019
Eli Lilly and Company
9,890,210
Teva Pharma
Challenged Claims Unpatentable
IPR2018-01426
08/08/2018
02/25/2019
Eli Lilly and Company
9,890,211
Teva Pharma
Challenged Claims Unpatentable
IPR2018-01427
08/08/2018
02/25/2019
Eli Lilly and Company
8,597,649
Teva Pharma
Challenged Claims Unpatentable

US  9,340,614 (Labrys Biologics, Inc.; Exp: 11/02/2026):

1. A human or humanized monoclonal anti-CGRP antagonist antibody that preferentially binds to human .alpha.-CGRP as compared to amylin.


US  9,266,951 (Labrys Biologics, Inc.; Exp: 11/02/2026):

1. A human or humanized monoclonal anti-CGRP antagonist antibody that (1) binds human .alpha.-CGRP and (2) inhibits cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) activation in cells.


US  9,346,881 (Labrys Biologics, Inc.; Exp: 11/02/2026):

1. A human or humanized, monoclonal anti-CGRP antagonist antibody that (1) binds human .alpha.-CGRP and (2) inhibits human .alpha.-CGRP from binding to its receptor as measured by a radioligand binding assay in SK-N-MC cells.


US  9,890,210 (Teva Pharmaceuticals International GmbH.; Exp: 11/02/2026):

1. A humanized monoclonal anti-Calcitonin Gene-Related Peptide (CGRP) antagonist antibody, comprising: two human IgG heavy chains, each heavy chain comprising three complementarity determining regions (CDRs) and four framework regions, wherein portions of the two heavy chains together form an Fc region; and two light chains, each light chain comprising three CDRs and four framework regions; wherein the CDRs impart to the antibody specific binding to a CGRP consisting of amino acid residues 1 to 37 of SEQ ID NO:15 or SEQ ID NO: 43.


US  9,890,211 (Teva Pharmaceuticals International GmbH; Exp: 11/02/2026):

1. A humanized monoclonal anti-Calcitonin Gene-Related Peptide (CGRP) antagonist antibody, comprising: two human IgG heavy chains, each heavy chain comprising three complementarity determining regions (CDRs) and four framework regions, wherein portions of the two heavy chains together form an Fc region; and two light chains, each light chain comprising three CDRs and four framework regions; wherein the CDRs impart to the antibody specific binding to a CGRP consisting of amino acid residues 1 to 37 of SEQ ID NO:15 or SEQ ID NO: 43, and wherein the antibody binds to the CGRP with a binding affinity (K.sub.D) of about 10 nM or less as measured by surface plasmon resonance at 370C.


US  8,597,649 (Labrys Biologics, Inc.; Exp: 11/02/2026):

1. An isolated human or humanized anti-CGRP antagonist antibody with a binding affinity (K.sub.D) to human .alpha.-CGRP of 50 nM or less as measured by surface plasmon resonance at 370C.

Wednesday, February 19, 2020

Vortioxetine - USA


Claim Construction (District of Delaware): Feb 18, 2020

Pending before the Court is the parties' second set of claim construction disputes related to terms in U.S. Patent Nos. 9,125,908 ("'908 patent"), 9,125,909 ("'909 patent"), 9,125,910 ("'910 patent"), and 9,278,096 ("'096 patent"). The Court held a claim construction hearing on December 18, 2019, at which both sides presented oral argument.

 

CONSTRUCTION OF DISPUTED TERMS:


A. "has to be ceased or reduced due to sexually related adverse events"

Plaintiffs: No construction necessary. Alternatively, "has to be ceased or reduced due to an adverse event involving dysfunction in one or more areas of sexual functioning, including, desire, arousal, physical response, orgasm, or satisfaction"

Defendant: This term is indefinite.

Court: "has to be ceased or reduced due to an adverse event involving dysfunction in one or more areas of sexual functioning, including, desire, arousal, physical response, orgasm, or satisfaction".

B. "cognitive impairment"

Plaintiffs: "a decline or deficit in one or more cognitive functions or cognitive domains"

Defendant: "a CNS disorder including a decline in cognitive functions or cognitive domains, which is independent from depression or major depressive disorder."

Court: "a decline or deficit in one or more cognitive functions or cognitive domains"

Tuesday, February 11, 2020

Mifepristone - USA


IPR decision: Feb 10, 2020

AIA Review #
Filing Date
Institution Date
Petitioner
Patent
Respondent
FINAL WRITTEN DECISION
IPR2018-01494
08/02/2018
02/15/2019
Neptune Generics LLC
8,921,348
Corcept Therapeutics Inc.
Claims 1-7 are patentable

US 8,921,348 (Corcept Therapeutics, Inc.; Exp: 08/27/2028) – listed in OB

1. A method for optimizing levels of mifepristone in a patient suffering from a disorder amenable to treatment by mifepristone, the method comprising: treating the patient with seven or more daily doses of mifepristone over a period of seven or more days; testing the serum levels of the patient to determine whether the blood levels of mifepristone are greater than 1300 ng/mL; and adjusting the daily dose of the patient to achieve mifepristone blood levels greater than 1300 ng/mL.

Friday, February 7, 2020

Alogliptin & combinations – USA


On Feb 04, 2020, Judge Stanley R. Chesler of New Jersey found claims of alogliptin compound patent valid & infringed.

Takeda (Plaintiff) own U.S. Patent No. 7,807,689 (compound), which is listed in the Orange Book as protecting Plaintiffs’ alogliptin benzoate formulations, marketed under the brand names Nesina®, Kazano®, and Oseni®. Indoco & Torrent (Defendants) filed ANDAs seeking approval to market generic products. The defendants stipulated infringement of claims 4 and 12 of the ’689 patent & contested invalidity challenge. Claim 4 covers alogliptin & claim 12 covers specific benzoate salt.

Defendants presented case on obviousness-type double patenting and on obviousness. Specifically, Defendants’ invalidity theories relied heavily on a chemistry technique termed “scaffold hopping” or “scaffold replacement” and “isosteric replacement theory”. For this defendants relied on “Böhm” reference. Bohm states that,

“Scaffold hopping approach requires the availability of a template – a chemical structure displaying the desired biological activity, and it is based on the assumption that the same biological activity can be exerted by other compounds that maintain some essential features of the template but are structurally different otherwise”.      
   
Defendants argued that claims 4 and 12 are invalid, under the doctrine of obviousness-type double patenting, because they are not patentably distinct from F162, the compound disclosed in claim 162 of the ’344 patent. Defendants argued that the POSA would have been motivated to replace the scaffold of the claim 162 compound with the goal of developing a new DPP-IV inhibitor for the treatment of Type 2 diabetes, because ‘scaffold replacement’ is one of ‘a range of strategies’ used by medicinal chemists to design and identify novel structures.”

But court said that Defendants has offered no support for the proposition that the POSA would have been motivated to choose scaffold replacement to develop a novel compound from F162. Defendants have not yet identified some reason which would have led a POSA to select scaffold replacement to modify F162 to make F162u with a reasonable expectation of success. As of the Priority Date, the art did not have available the structural information needed to perform scaffold replacement to produce a non-peptidic molecule that was active as a DPP-IV inhibitor with a reasonable expectation of success. The cited testimony says no more than that scaffold replacement was one of a “range” of options. Furthermore, Defendants relies substantially on the testimony of Dr. Rotella, whose credibility was damaged on cross-examination. During the direct examination, Dr. Rotella stated that the substituents of F162 and alogliptin are the same, but the scaffolds differ. On cross-examination, Dr. Rotella agreed that F162 contained a fluorine atom as a substituent, while alogliptin does not. Dr. Rotella’s credibility also suffered from inconsistent testimony. Court also did not find second isosteric replacement theory convincing & denied the challenge.

With respect to obviousness theory, Defendants argued that POSA searching for a promising drug development candidate would have focused on non-peptidic inhibitors and specifically on xanthine-based compounds, which a POSA would recognize as “particularly promising.” Defendants argued that, in short, two references suggest DCAX as lead compound, the WO ’496 patent and the CA ’730 patent. Plaintiffs contended that Defendants’ theory is based on hindsight. Plaintiffs argued that Defendants rely principally on the testimony of their expert, Dr. Ferraris, but that his credibility is undermined by, and is inconsistent with, his own work. Dr. Ferraris testified that a POSA seeking a candidate for drug development would have ignored peptidic inhibitors, but his own work during this time was on peptidic inhibitors. His actual work thus contradicts his opinions in this case. Next, Plaintiffs point to the fact that Dr. Ferraris admitted that he did not actually do an independent lead compound analysis. Dr. Ferraris testified that the choice of DCAX and the two references supporting that choice, the WO ’496 and CA ’730 patents, were given to him by Defendants’ counsel; he did not search through the prior art to find them.

Court next said that, Defendants’ path to the selection of DCAX is unpersuasive. Defendants argue, in short, that there are eight compounds that are mentioned in both the WO ’496 and the CA ’730 patents and that, of those eight compounds, DCAX has the greatest potency. Defendants did not explain why a POSA would believe that a compound mentioned in two patents is more worthy of development than a more potent compound listed in one. The prior art did not supply a POSA with a reason to select DCAX as a lead compound over other compounds in the prior art. Court said that the Defendant’s argument has a number of major gaps, missing connections or steps with inadequate support. This is a theory with major defects and does not come close to meeting the clear and convincing standard for successful validity challenges.

The Court thus concluded that Defendants have failed to prove, by clear and convincing evidence, that claims 4 and 12 of the ’689 patent are invalid under their theories based on § 103 obviousness or the doctrine of obviousness-type double patenting.

Thursday, February 6, 2020

Dimethyl fumarate- USA

IPR decision: Feb. 05, 2020

AIA Review #
Filing Date
Institution Date
Petitioner
Patent
Respondent
FINAL WRITTEN DECSION
IPR2018-01403
07/13/2018
02/06/2019
Mylan Pharmaceuticals Inc.
8,399,514
Biogen Idec MA Inc.
Claims 1-20 are patentable
On US’514 patent, Coalition for Affordable Drugs previously filed IPRs (IPR2015-01136 & IPR2015-01993) on 05/01/2015 & 09/28/2015. IPR2015-01136 was terminated & in IPR2015-01993, Final Written Decision was issued by PTAB finding claims 1-20 patentable. Sawai also filed IPR (IPR2019-00789) which was instituted on 09/12/2019.

US 8,399,514 (Biogen Idec; Exp: Feb 07, 2028) – OB listed

1. A method of treating a subject in need of treatment for multiple sclerosis comprising orally administering to the subject in need thereof a pharmaceutical composition consisting essentially of (a) a therapeutically effective amount of dimethyl fumarate, monomethyl fumarate, or a combination thereof, and (b) one or more pharmaceutically acceptable excipients, wherein the therapeutically effective amount of dimethyl fumarate, monomethyl fumarate, or a combination thereof is about 480 mg per day.

11. A method of treating a subject in need of treatment for multiple sclerosis consisting essentially of orally administering to the subject about 480 mg per day of dimethyl fumarate, monomethyl fumarate, or a combination thereof.

15. A method of treating a subject in need of treatment for multiple sclerosis comprising orally administering to the subject pharmaceutical composition consisting essentially of (a) a therapeutically effective amount of dimethyl fumarate and (b) one or more pharmaceutically acceptable excipients, wherein the therapeutically effective amount of dimethyl fumarate is about 480 mg per day.

20. A method of treating a subject in need of treatment for multiple sclerosis comprising treating the subject in need thereof with a therapeutically effective amount of dimethyl fumarate, monomethyl fumarate, or a combination thereof, wherein the therapeutically effective amount of dimethyl fumarate, monomethyl fumarate, or a combination thereof is about 480 mg per day.

PTAB analysis:

Mylan filed IPR petition citing different prior arts essentially disclosing different dosage ranges (360 mg/day and 720 mg/day) of dimethyl fumarate (DMF) for treatment of multiple sclerosis (MS). None of the prior art disclosed specific 480 mg dose for the treatment of MS. The central question before PTAB was whether discovery of the 480 mg/day dose of DMF in a method of treating multiple sclerosis was obvious because of dose optimization within an established effective range. PTAB said that “discovery of an optimum value of a variable in a known process is usually obvious.” Pfizer, Inc. v. Apotex, Inc., 480 F.3d 1348, 1368 (Fed. Cir. 2007); see also In re Aller, 220 F.2d 454, 456 (CCPA 1955) (“[W]here the general conditions of a claim are disclosed in the prior art, it is not inventive to discover the optimum or workable ranges by routine experimentation.”)

PTAB said that most of the prior arts cited by petitioner cast doubt on lower range, ie 360 mg/day dose. However, there is teaching in the arts about 720 mg/day dose of DMF. In absence of the specific lower range it would not have been routine dose optimization. In one of the ground, PTAB agreed with petitioner & said that prior arts (Kappos 2006 and WO ’342) disclose each claim limitation in the combination of references & POSA would have been motivated to optimize the daily dose of DMF with a reasonable expectation of success. But the patent owner’s evidence of unexpected result overcomes the obviousness challenge. Specifically, 480 mg/day dose was found in fact as efficacious as 720 mg/day dose. Additionally both USFDA & EMA have considered the results & allowed marketing application with 480 mg/day dose. PTAB thus concluded that weight of the evidence on this record sufficiently establishes that the comparable efficacy between the 480 mg/day and 720 mg/day doses would have been unexpected. Therefore, challenged claims 1-20 are not unpatentable.