On March 31, 2020, Delaware district court found epinephrine
composition patent invalid & not infringed by Hospira’s 505(b)2 product.
This is a Hatch-Waxman litigation, where Plaintiff (Belcher
Pharmaceuticals, LLC) sued Defendant (Hospira, Inc.) for filing NDA with USFDA
to market Epinephrine Injection. Belcher is the holder of NDA No. 205029, which
was approved by FDA on July 29, 2015 for a 1 mg/mL injectable l-epinephrine
formulation with 1 mL of solution contained in a 2 mL ampule. Hospira’s NDA
seeks FDA approval of a 0.1 mg/mL injectable l-epinephrine formulation.
Background:
Belcher’s NDA was a paper NDA, means “literature-only” based
submission. It was essentially based on Sintetica’s early pharmaceutical preparations
of epinephrine, which was preservative and sulphites free, had pHs of 2.8-3.3,
and included 15% more epinephrine (i.e., an “overage”) than “the theoretical
value to compensate the activity loss during manufacturing and storage.” As
part of its NDA, Belcher sought to replace the “old” in-process pH of 2.8-3.3
with a “new” in-process pH of 2.4-2.6, and use an overage of 10-15%. But during
review, FDA asked Belcher to evaluate the effect of an in-process pH of 2.4 to
2.6 on racemization of epinephrine. Belcher’s regulatory consultants – INC
Research – recommended that Belcher use the in-process pH of 2.8-3.3 presented
in the original NDA and Sintetica batch data, since any changes in the process
from the process used to obtain the batch data would delay approval. Thus, Belcher
submitted its response to the FDA, stating, they have refocused their studies
on determining the effect of the in-process pH of 2.8-3.3 and not pH of 2.4 to
2.6. The FDA ultimately approved Belcher’s epinephrine product with a pH of
2.8-3.3.
During litigation, Plaintiff specifically asserted
infringement of claims 6 & 7 of US 9,283,197 patent which is expiring in
Aug. 2034. The patent is related to more potent and less toxic formulations of
epinephrine. The asserted claims are as
follows:
6. An injectable
liquid pharmaceutical formulation of l-epinephrine sterile solution; said
liquid pharmaceutical formulation having a pH between 2.8 and 3.3; said
injectable liquid pharmaceutical formulation compounded in an aqueous solution
as 1.0 to 1.06 mg/mL l-epinephrine, and further including a tonicity agent; said
liquid pharmaceutical formulation including no more than about 6% d-epinephrine
and no more than about 0.5% adrenalone at release, and no more than about 12%
d-epinephrine and no more than about 0.5% adrenalone over a shelf-life of at
least 12 months.
7. The said injectable
liquid pharmaceutical formulation of claim 6 further having a concentration of
1 mg per mL l-epinephrine.
Belcher alleged that Hospira’s bioequivalent product infringes
US’197 patent under the doctrine of equivalents. Hospira contends that it does
not infringe the ’197 Patent and, further, that the Patent is invalid and/or
unenforceable. In June 2019, the Court held a two-day bench trial.
Infringement: Doctrine
of Equivalents
The parties agreed that only one claim limitation is at
issue and, thus, “the only dispute is whether Hospira’s [0.1 mg/mL] NDA Product
is equivalent to a formulation ‘compounded in an aqueous solution as 1.0 to
1.06 mg/mL l-epinephrine.’” Belcher argued the two are equivalent because both
are intended to use low (0-6%) overages and to deliver the same total amount (1
mg) of epinephrine to a patient (Hospira's product contains 10 ml solution). Hospira responds that the claims are directed
to concentrations, not overages or amounts, and the concentrations of the claim
and the Hospira NDA Product are, indisputably, not equivalent. Court agreed
with Hospira.
Central to the parties’ dispute is whether the Court, in
applying DOE, should look to the claimed concentration itself, or the intended
purpose of that concentration. Court said that the all-elements rule mandates
that the Court look only at the claimed concentration – “compounded in an
aqueous solution as 1.0 to 1.06 mg/mL l-epinephrine” – and not the intended
overage, amount, or use of the formulation as a whole, as none of those
features are claimed. The disputed claim limitation is directed to
concentration, so to prove infringement Belcher was required to prove that the
accused product practices the claimed concentration, either literally or by
equivalents. Having failed to do so, the Court cannot find infringement.
Invalidity:
Hospira sought to invalidate claims 6 and 7 of the ’197
Patent on three independent bases: (1) the prior art anticipates the claims;
(2) the prior art renders the claims obvious; and (3) the Patent fails to list
all of the correct inventors. (4) Hospira also argued that the ’197 Patent is
unenforceable based on inequitable conduct.
Anticipation:
Hospira argued the ’197 Patent is invalid based on two
pieces of anticipatory prior art: (1) JHP’s Adrenalin Product; and (2)
Hospira’s Ampul Product. Court said that neither JHP’s Adrenalin Product nor
Hospira’s Ampul Product anticipates the claimed invention, as neither teaches a
“formulation compounded in an aqueous solution as 1.0 to 1.06 mg/mL
l-epinephrine”. The Court construed this limitation as a product-by-process limitation,
which means that, “for validity purposes, the ‘invention’ . . . is the
product.” Medicines Co. v. Hospira, Inc., 827 F.3d 1363, 1374 (Fed. Cir. 2016).
Hospira argued there are no structural differences between the claimed
invention and JHP’s Adrenalin Product or Hospira’s Ampul Product, as all
constitute a 1 mg/mL epinephrine product according to the USP. Court, however
said that to anticipate the claimed invention, the prior art must have a
post-compounding l-epinephrine concentration between 1.0 and 1.06 mg/mL. This
does not mean at any time after compounding (like Hospira’s Ampul Product,
which arguably had 1.002-1.01 mg/mL l-epinephrine at testing, but some time
relatively immediately thereafter. The prior arts products have higher
post-compounding overages and concentrations (e.g., 1.095-1.134 mg/mL for JHP’s
Adrenalin Product and approximately 1.1 mg/mL for Hospira’s Ampul Product) than
the claimed invention. Thus, this structural difference precludes a finding of
anticipation.
Obviousness:
Court said that the FDA historically approved (or permitted
through grandfathering) the sale of epinephrine products that complied with the
USP monograph, which set the upper limit on overages at 15%. At some point,
however, the FDA began rejecting products that were otherwise USP-compliant,
and demanded justifications for overages in accordance with ICH Guidelines. Due
to the FDA’s enforcement of the ICH Guidelines, a POSA would have been
motivated to minimize the overage in any epinephrine product in order to obtain
FDA approval. A POSA would have known that reducing overages would not
negatively impact other relevant properties, such as racemization rate or
safety. Instead, as a POSA would know, reducing overages would predominantly
impact shelf life, for there would be less epinephrine available to oxidize or
racemize before reaching the 90% floor set by the USP.
Both JHP’s Adrenalin Product and Hospira’s Ampul Product had
ample shelf life to spare. Therefore, it would have been obvious to minimize
the approximately 10-15% overages of the Products, including to between 0 and
6%, while balancing allowable shelf life. That, in turn, means it would have
been obvious to compound JHP’s Adrenalin Product or Hospira’s Ampul Product at
1.0-1.06 mg/mL to produce a 1 mg/mL product, in accordance with the ICH
Guidelines. A POSA would have had a reasonable expectation of success in
pursuing this obvious modification of one or both of the Products.
Improper Inventorship:
Court said that under 35 U.S.C. § 102(f), one cannot obtain
a valid patent if “he did not himself invent the subject matter sought to be
patented.” “Determining ‘inventorship’
is nothing more than determining who conceived the subject matter at issue,
whether that subject matter is recited in a claim in an application or in a
count in an interference.” [Sewall v. Walters, 21 F.3d 411, 415 (Fed. Cir.
1994)]. Conception is a question of law premised on underlying factual
findings.
In this case, Hospira argued that Mr. Taneja – the sole
named inventor – “neither conceived of nor reduced to practice the alleged
invention of the ’197 Patent,” as his sole contribution was to suggest a pH of
between 2.8 and 3.3, which was known in the prior art. Court agreed with
Hospira. Court said that the record is devoid of reliable corroborating
evidence to support Mr. Taneja’s claim that he conceived of the pH range
limitation and communicated it to Sintetica. Additionally, as Mr. Taneja
himself testified, he was aware that “as early as 2003 Sintetica manufactured 1
milligram per milliliter epinephrine products having a pH in the range of 2.8 to
3.3,” so in fact even he recognized that he was not the first to conceive of
using the claimed pH range in epinephrine formulations. Even if all of this
were incorrect, and even taking Mr. Taneja’s testimony in the best possible
light, all he had was a “hope, or wish” that his pH would be successful, which
is insufficient to constitute conception. This conception requires more than
“just a general goal or research plan,” and 6+requires a “definite and
permanent idea of an operative invention, including every feature of the
subject matter to be patented.” [In re VerHoef, 888 F.3d 1362, 1366 (Fed. Cir.
2018)].
Inequitable Conduct:
Court said that inequitable conduct is an equitable defense
to patent infringement that, if proved, bars enforcement of a patent.” Therasense,
Inc. v. Becton, Dickinson and Co., 649 F.3d 1276, 1285 (Fed. Cir. 2011). To
prevail on a claim of inequitable conduct, the accused infringer must prove by
clear and convincing evidence that the patentee: (1) “acted with the specific
intent to deceive the PTO” and (2) made a material misrepresentation or
omission. “In a case involving nondisclosure of information, clear and
convincing evidence must show that the applicant made a deliberate decision to
withhold a known material reference.” For a misrepresentation or omission to be
“material,” it must be “but-for” material. That is, the accused infringer must
prove that “the PTO would not have allowed a claim had it been aware of the
undisclosed prior art.”
Court said that as Chief Scientific Officer of Belcher and
an active participant in the prosecution of the ’197 Patent, Mr. Rubin owed a
duty of candor and good faith to the Patent Office. Despite this duty, Rubin
admitted that he withheld information from Belcher’s patent prosecution
attorney and the Patent Office, including Stepensky, JHP’s Adrenalin Product,
and the 2003 Sintetica Products, at least some of which the Court has found to
be but-for material to patentability. Rubin testified that he withheld these
references because he considered them (and others) irrelevant, as they were
directed to formulations that contained preservatives, used epinephrine
bitartrate base, or had “high” overages. But, the Court did not find Rubin’s
testimony about why he did not disclose the prior art references to the PTO to
be credible or plausible.
During prosecution, in non-final rejection the Examiner
relied on Helenek, which taught an epinephrine formulation with a pH range of
2.2-5.0. In counter arguing Rubin and Belcher knew that pH would be critical to
persuading the Examiner to approve the patent. Certainly by this point in the
prosecution, Rubin and Belcher had an unambiguous duty to disclose any material
information pertinent to the claimed pH, and not just prior art limited to
preservative-free or low overage formulations. Yet Rubin approved the following
response from Belcher: “Helenek et al. does not make obvious the Applicant’s pH
range of 2.8 and 3.3, which was unexpectedly found to be critical by the
Applicant to reduce the racemization of 1-epinephrine.” The statement that Belcher’s
claimed pH was “unexpected” was false. At the time this statement was made,
Rubin knew about Stepensky, the JHP Adrenalin Product, and the 2003 Sintetica
Products, all of which taught a pH in the range of 2.8 to 3.3. The Examiner,
not knowing of these references, accepted Belcher’s representations as true and
was persuaded by them to approve the Patent.
Therefore, Court found US’197 patent unenforceable because
of Inequitable Conduct.
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