On Apr 30, 2020, The Court of Justice of the European Union
(CJEU) has handed down its decision in Royalty Pharma case on interpretation of
Article 3 (a) of SPC regulation.
This request was made in the course of proceedings between
Royalty Pharma and the Deutsches Patent- und Markenamt (German Patent and
Trademark Office, DPMA) on the latter's refusal to issue a SPC for sitagliptin
used for the treatment of diabetes mellitus.
Background of the
case:
Royalty Pharma is the holder of the European patent (DE) EP
1084705. This patent discloses a method of reducing the blood glucose level of
mammals by injecting inhibitors of the enzyme dipeptidyl peptidase IV ('DPP
IV'), which contributes to the regulation of blood sugar levels. Sitagliptin is
one of the DPP IV inhibitors. On 17 December 2014, Royalty Pharma filed a SPC
request for sitagliptin with the DPMA, on the basis of this basic patent and a
marketing authorization Issued on March 21, 2007 by the European Medicines
Agency (EMA) to Merck for theproduct, Januvia®. That application was dismissed on April
12, 2017 by the DPMA on the grounds that the requirement in Article 3 a) of
Regulation No o 469/2009 was not met.
This office considered that, if sitagliptin meets the functional definition of
the DPP IV inhibitor given by the claims of the basic patent at issue, the
patent does not contain any specific disclosure of this product, so that the
concrete active ingredient has not been known to the skilled person. Thus,
according to the DPMA, the subject-matter of the protection of that patent does
not correspond to the medicinal product subsequently developed and marketed
under the name of Januvia. It would therefore be contrary to the objectives of
Regulation No o 469/2009 issuing an SPC
for a product that has not been disclosed by the basic patent at issue.
Royalty Pharma appealed against this decision to the
Bundespatentgericht (Federal Patent Court, Germany). It argued that the
description of the functional characteristics is sufficient for the grant of
SPC. It submitted that sitagliptin meets the functional definition of a DPP IV category
of active principle referred to in the basic patent at issue. According to
Royalty pharma, any DPP IV inhibitor for treating diabetes mellitus falls
within the “heart of the patented invention”, which covers all of the specific
compounds meeting this definition. The Bundespatentgericht (Federal Patent
Court) decided to stay the proceedings and to refer the following questions to
the CJEU:
Questions:
"1) A product is it protected by the basic patent in
force in accordance with Article 3 a) of Regulation No o 469/2009, which falls when the object of
protection defined by the claims of the patent thus being delivered to the
skilled person as a concrete embodiment?
2) The requirements in Article 3 a) of Regulation No o 469/2009 are they therefore not sufficiently
fulfilled when the product in question certainly has the general functional
definition that patent claims to give 'a category of active principle without
being individualized as a concrete embodiment of the education protected by the
basic patent?
3) A product is it already protected by the basic patent in
force in accordance with Article 3 a) of Regulation No o 469/2009, certainly falls when the functional
definition in the patent claims but was not developed until after the filing
date of the basic patent application in an independent inventive step? "
CJEU analysis:
Court said that by its first and second questions, which
should be examined together, the referring court asks, in essence, whether
Article 3 a) of Regulation No o 469/2009
must be interpreted as meaning that a product is protected by a basic patent in
force, within the meaning of this provision, when it meets a general functional
definition used by one of the claims of the basic patent and necessarily falls
under the invention covered by this patent , without being individualized as a
concrete embodiment to be learned from the teaching of said patent. To this
end, two cumulative conditions must be met as set out in “Teva V Gilead, 25 july 2018”. First, the product must necessarily
fall in the light of the description and drawings of the basic patent, of the
invention covered by patent. Second, the person skilled in the art must be able
to identify this product specifically in the light of all the elements
disclosed by the said patent, and on the basis of the state of the art at the
date filing or priority of the same patent.
In the main proceedings, it is apparent from the order for
reference that, if sitagliptin is not explicitly mentioned in the claims of the
basic patent, it meets the functional definition used by one of the claims of
that patent . In those circumstances sitagliptin necessarily falls, as a DPP IV
inhibitor, from the invention covered by the basic patent and, therefore, the
first condition is met. In order to determine whether the second condition is
satisfied, it is more particularly for the referring court to verify whether
the subject-matter of the SPC concerned is within the limits of the
personskilled in the art, on the date of filing or priority of the basic
patent, to deduce directly and unequivocally from the specification of this
patent as it was filed, based on its general knowledge in the field considered
the filing or priority date and in the light of the state of the art at the
filing or priority date. It follows from the foregoing that the answer to the
first two questions that Article 3 a) of Regulation No o 469/2009 must be interpreted
as meaning that a product is protected by a basic patent in force, within the
meaning of this provision, when it meets a general functional definition
employed by one of the claims of the basic patent and necessarily relates to
the invention covered by this patent, without being individualized as a
concrete embodiment to be learned from the teaching of said patent, since it is
specifically identifiable, in the light of all the elements disclosed by the
same patent, by a person skilled in the art, on the basis of his general
knowledge in the field considered on the date of filing or priority of the
basic patent and of the state of the art on this same date.
By its third question, the referring court asks whether
Article 3 a) of Regulation No o 469/2009
must be interpreted as meaning that a product is not protected by the basic
patent in force , within the meaning of this provision, when, although falling
within the functional definition contained in the claims of this patent, it was
developed after the filing date of the application for the basic patent, at the
end of an autonomous inventive step. In this regard, it should be recalled
that, for the purposes of applying the condition set by Article 3 a) of
Regulation No o 469/2009, the purpose
of the protection conferred by the patent base must be determined on the filing
date or priority date of this patent. Indeed, if it could be taken into
account the results of research carried out after the filing date or priority
date of said patent, a SPC could allow its holder to unduly benefit from
protection for these results, even though these these were not known on either
of these dates. It follows that a product subject to a SPC or a request for a
SPC which has been developed, after the filing or priority date of the basic
patent, at the end of an autonomous inventive step , cannot be considered to
fall within the object of the protection conferred by this patent.
CJEU thus, has now expressly clarified that its
interpretation of Article 3(a) endorsed in Teva
v. Gilead does not accord any relevance to the “core inventive advance” of
the basic patent. Therefore, “core inventive advance” concept has no place in
interpretation of Article 3 (a) of SPC.
For these reasons, the Court held that:
1) Article 3 a) of Regulation (EC) n o
469/2009 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 6 May 2009,
concerning the supplementary protection certificate for medicinal products,
must be interpreted as meaning that a product is protected by a basic patent in
force, within the meaning of this provision , when it meets a general
functional definition used by one of the claims of the basic patent and
necessarily relates to the invention covered by this patent, without being
individualized as a concrete embodiment to be drawn from the teaching of said
patent, as soon as it is specifically identifiable, in the light of all of the
elements disclosed by the same patent, by a person skilled in the art,on the
basis of his general knowledge in the field considered on the date of filing or
priority of the basic patent and the state of the art on this same date.
2) Article 3 a) of Regulation No o 469/2009 must be interpreted as meaning that
a product is not protected by a basic patent in force within the meaning of
that provision where, although that falling under the functional definition
given in the claims of this patent, it was developed after the filing date of
the application for the basic patent, at the end of an autonomous inventive
step.
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