On May 08 2020, Federal Circuit affirmed district court’s judgment
on pleadings that Slayback's 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 lawsuit in response to Slayback's submission of
NDA No. 212209 for approval to manufacture and sell before the four asserted
patents expire. Eagle’s four asserted patents share essentially the same
written description and all independent claims recite essentially the same
limitations.
Claim 1 of U.S. Patent No. 9,572,796 is representative.
1. A non-aqueous
liquid composition comprising: bendamustine, or a pharmaceutically acceptable
salt thereof; a pharmaceutically acceptable fluid comprising a mixture of
polyethylene glycol and propylene glycol, wherein the ratio of polyethylene
glycol to propylene glycol in the pharmaceutically acceptable fluid is from
about 95:5 to about 50:50; and a stabilizing amount of an antioxidant…….;
Slayback conceded that its product literally infringes all claim
limitations except for the “pharmaceutically acceptable fluid” limitation.
Eagle asserted that Slayback’s product infringes the “pharmaceutically
acceptable fluid” limitation under the doctrine of equivalents. Specifically,
Eagle asserted that the “ethanol” in Slayback’s product is insubstantially
different from the propylene glycol (“PG”) in the claimed composition. On
January 4, 2019, Slayback moved for a judgment of non-infringement on the
pleadings under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(c). Slayback argued that the
disclosure-dedication doctrine barred Eagle’s claim of infringement under the
doctrine of equivalents because the asserted patents disclose, but do not
claim, ethanol as an alternative solvent to PG. On May 9, 2019, the district
court granted Slayback’s motion for judgment of non-infringement on the
pleadings. You can read the summary “reported here” on
this blog.
Eagle appealed.
During appeal, Eagle argued that the district court committed two
errors. First, Eagle contended that the district court erred when it concluded
that the asserted patents disclose, but do not claim, ethanol—and therefore dedicated
ethanol to the public. Second, Eagle contended that the district court
improperly applied the dedication-disclosure doctrine at the pleadings stage, in
the presence of factual disputes and without drawing all inferences in Eagle’s
favor.
With respect to first point, Eagle contended that the asserted
patents disclose three distinct “categories” of bendamustine formulations: (i)
chloride salt formulations; (ii) antioxidant formulations; and (iii) dimethyl
sulfoxide (“DMSO”) formulations. Skilled artisan would recognize that the three
separate categories “have separate ingredients and work in different ways.” Eagle
asserted that the specification only discloses ethanol as an alternative to PG
when discussing the unclaimed chloride salt formulations; it never discloses
ethanol as an alternative to PG when discussing the claimed antioxidant
formulations. Federal Circuit said that the disclosure-dedication doctrine does
not require the specification to disclose the allegedly dedicated subject matter
in an embodiment that exactly matches the claimed embodiment. Instead, the
disclosure dedication doctrine requires only that the specification disclose
the unclaimed matter “as an alternative to the relevant claim limitation.” [Pfizer,
Inc. v. Teva Pharm. USA, Inc., 429 F.3d 1364, 1378 (Fed. Cir. 2005)]. The asserted patents disclose ethanol as an
alternative to PG in the “pharmaceutically acceptable fluid” claim limitation.
The specification repeatedly identifies—without qualification—ethanol as an
alternative pharmaceutically acceptable fluid. This is sufficient for the disclosure
dedication doctrine here & thus ethanol is dedicated to public.
With respect to second point, Eagle argued that at the time the
district court entered judgment of non-infringement on the pleadings, a factual
dispute existed. District court erred by improperly ignoring Dr. Amiji’s
declaration & resolving the factual dispute at the pleadings stage without
drawing all reasonable inferences in Eagle’s favor. Specifically, Eagle argued
that the district court was required to infer that a “skilled artisan would not
have understood that ethanol was an alternative to PG in the claimed
‘PEG/PG/Antioxidant’ category of formulations.” Federal Circuit said that when
ruling on a Rule 12(c) motion, district courts have discretion to consider
evidence outside the complaint for purposes of deciding whether to accept that
evidence and convert the motion into one for summary judgment. And district
court here did not abuse its discretion when it set aside Dr. Amiji’s
declaration. The district court reviewed Dr. Amiji’s declaration and determined
that it was merely an “attempt to manufacture a factual dispute.” Moreover, patents
themselves provided “sufficient context to decide” the legal issue at hand
& therefore, there was no need to refer to the declaration. Only reasonable
inference that can be made from the patent disclosures is that a skilled
artisan would understand the patents to disclose ethanol as an alternative to
the claimed PG. As a result, even when viewing the pleadings in the lightmost favorable
to Eagle, there is no material issue of fact to resolve and Slayback is
entitled to judgment in its favor as a matter of law.
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