Israel’s Teva Pharmaceutical Industries has launched a High Court action in London to revoke the European patent for Seroquel, an anti-depressant developed by AstraZeneca.
Currently, no further details are available.
Teva Pharmaceuticals filed an Opposition proceeding to Schwartz’ Pharma’s patent number 149567 titled “Stable salts of novel derivatives of 3-3 diphenylpropylamines”. In response, Schwartz cancelled a dependent claim and filed a new dependent claim.
During opposition proceedings the applicant is allowed to delete claims and to narrow the scope of the claim set, but is filing a new dependent claim permissible narrowing, is it prohibited?
This question is addressed by the Adjudicator of Intellectual Property, Ms Shoshani Caspi, in an interim decision.
Background
During patent examination in Israel, the applicant has a lot of leeway in amending the claims. Providing the amendments are fairly supported by the specification, the applicant can widen the claim set and can change their focus. Prior to publication for opposition purposes, divisional applications may be filed for inventive material supported by the specification but not otherwise claimed.
During the opposition period, when, after allowance, the patent publishes and, for three months, third parties may file oppositions, in response to an opposition, the applicant may narrow the scope of the claimed invention.
According to section 65, after issuance, the applicant may file amendments to clarify or to correct a mistake may be made, or the claims may be narrowed. Section 66 requires the Commissioner to ascertain that the amendment does not add new material not supported by the specification and does not widen the scope of protection.
The applicant narrowed claims 1-5, 8-11 and 16, by specifying the preparation in more detail, narrowed claims 1,3 8 and 10 by defining a group R as being specifically isopropyl, and deleted claim 17. These changes are certainly narrowing individual claims, or deleting them and were allowed.
The applicant also wished to delete allowed claim 6 and file a new claim 6 claiming the salts of the preparations of the independent claim.
The question addressed by Shoshani Caspi is whether the new claim 6, that adds a limiting feature to independent claim 1 is considered permissible as it does not widen the scope of protection of the patent, but merely adds a limitation to that claimed in the main claim, or is it considered inadmissible as it is not clearly a restriction to the scope of any claim – since claim 1 is still on record, and this is a dependent claim?
Essentially the issue is whether adding additional claims that could be opposed on their merits and could create new fallback positions, but don’t necessarily widen the scope of protection requested, can be filed during opposition proceedings, or whether the only amendments allowed are those designed to narrow the argument and are to be allowed if they are giving up of monopoly rights without a fight.
Judicial review Officer Shoshani Caspi framed the question as to whether Sections 65 an 66 should be considered together, or whether the applicant could file an amendment claiming that the scope of the claim set was not widened and the Commissioner should then check that this is the case.
The opposer’s position was that stepwise analysis of section 65 followed by section 66 was required, and each amendment should be classified as a correction, clarification or narrowing of a specific claim, whereas the applicant considered this overly formalistic and the question to be addressed was whether the scope of the claim-set was widened – which would not be allowed.
Despite noting precedents for such amendments, Shoshani Caspi ruled that the amendment was inadmissible and that henceforth amendments during oppositions should clearly fall into one or other category and any narrowing of the claim set should be clearly narrowing the scope of a specific claim.
The allowed amendments were restricting the range of species listed in Markush type claims. The Claim 6 amendment was not allowed. Costs of NIS 8000 were awarded to Teva.
In opposition proceedings number IL 172563, concerning a Merck patent application for “Phosphoric Acid Salt of a Dipeptidal Petidase-IV Inhibitor” Teva requested permission to submit an Opinion by a medical expert concerning experimental evidence conducted under his supervision. The opinion was relevant, but the correct time for submission thereof was together with other evidence.
The regulations for patent opposition proceedings in Israel and the general civil law proceedings require all evidence to produced at the proper time. Substantive issues generally take precedence over these formalistic requirements. Since Teva didn’t have the material at the proper time since the experiments had not been performed, there was no issue of bad faith in the late submission, which was not a delaying tactic since the evidence simply was not then available. However, this late-filed experimental evidence was crucial in determining whether Merck deserved a patent or not, and the scope thereof. Consequently, the Deputy Commissioner of Patents ruled that late submission of the evidence was allowable, but awarded costs of NIS 5000 to Merck as a form of punishment to Teva for deviating from the correct procedure.
We now await the main ruling.
The case: Opposition re IL 172563 to Merck.
Judge Barbara S. Jones of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York has denied Teva’s request for an order directing the generic-drug manufacturers Momenta Pharmaceuticals and Sandoz to provide advance notice of their ability and intention to launch a generic version of Copaxone, an ethical multiple sclerosis drug developed by Teva.
Teva Pharmaceuticals has filed a complaint against Mylan, a generic drug maker this week, alleging infringement of four patents covering Copaxone, Teva’s ethical drug for treating multiple sclerosis. Teva filed suit in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York.
This is not the first time that Teva has sued Mylan over Copaxone. Teva previously filed a separate lawsuit against Mylan in October 2009 for infringement of multiple patents, including all seven “Orange Book” patents, covering the chemical composition of Copaxone, pharmaceutical compositions containing it, methods of using it and processes for making it. Those patents expire in May 2014 and September 2015. No trial date is scheduled.
We note that earlier this month, Teva managed to block generic Copaxone manufactured by Sandoz and Momenta Pharmaceuticals by obtaining a district court injunction.
Teva have lost to Eli Lilly over Evista, with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (CAFC) upholding a decision banning Teva Pharmaceuticals Ltd from making a generic version of Evista. Eli Lilly’s patent protection won’t expire until March 2014.
However,the CAFC also upheld a decision by the district court in Indiana that some claims in two other Lilly patents related to Evista were invalid.
Evista, with sales exceeding a billion dollars a year, is used to treat osteoporosis in post-menopausal women.
The case: Eli Lilly and Co v. Teva Pharmaceuticals USA, Inc. No. 2010-1005, 1033.
WO/1999/004773 titled “Method for Inhibiting Bone Resorption” is a patent application to Merck for a once weekly oral dosage pill for alendronate and other bisphosphonates for the treatment of Paget’s disease and osteoporosis and was filed in Israel as a national stage entry of the PCT as IL 153109.
Alendronate is marketed by Merck as Fosomax®, which has annual worldwide sales of over one billion US dollars.
Once granted, the application was published for opposition purposes, and both Teva and Unipharm, Israel’s leading generic companies opposed the application. We note that Unipharm was responsible for the cancelation of the basic alendronate patent in the Israel Supreme Court. As would be expected, Merck was represented by Richard Luthi, Unipharm by Adi Levit and Teva by Tal Band.
The main claim is as follows:
A pharmaceutical composition useful for inhibiting bone resorption in a human comprising from about 70 mg to about 140 mg of alendronic acid or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof, or a mixture thereof, on an alendronic acid active weight basis, in association with a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier, wherein said composition is adapted for oral administration as a unit dosage form according to a continuous schedule having a periodicity selected from once-weekly dosing and bi-weekly dosing.
The grounds for opposition were lack of novelty, lack of inventive step, lack of utility and non-patentable subject matter. The Commissioner of Patents, Dr Meir Noam, complimented all the expert witnesses, both those recruited locally and those flown in from abroad, for their objectivity and professionalism, and pointed out that he had spent 12 days conducting oral hearings.
In his ruling, Dr. Noam concluded:
One interesting argument, put forward on behalf of Unipharm by Adi Levit, was that Haber’s rule applied, i.e. that ”the time of exposure makes the poison”. In other words, where the problem is local irritation, a higher dosage for a shorter exposure time is likely to be beneficial, and thus there was no invnetive step. Merck tried to get this argument suppressed on technical grounds, claiming that it wasn’t in the original opposition as filed.
After ruling the patent invalid, the opposers, Teva and Unipharm, were given 30 days to submit breakdowns of costs incurred.
The case: Opposition to IL 153109 to Merck, titled “Pharmaceutical Composition Useful for Inhibiting Bone Resorption in a Human Comprising Alendronic Acid or a Pharmaceutical Acceptable Salt thereof or a Mixture Thereof”.
COMMENT
The decision as to lack of inventive step is clear and correct. We note that the same patent was disallowed in Korea and the UK as relating to a method of treatment, and in Europe as lacking inventive step. Dr. Noam is correct, however, that a decision in Israel should attempt to interprete the local law in light of local precedent, and that the courts and patent office should be aware of but not bound by decisions in corresponding cases in other jurisdictions.
The applicants claimed that Circular MN 30 allows Swiss type claims, i.e. new uses for old treatment, and the claimed invention was directed to a formulation. I tend to side with the opponents though and find the Commissioner’s ruling on this point not convincing. I see this as a patent for a method of treatment where the dosage regime is an inherent part of the treatment, since the product lacks inherent novelty, and the novelty is a function of the dosage, which is a method step. Arguably, however, because of the long half life, the product is the high dosage pill – regardless of the exact dosage regime.
There is an underlying issue of principle as well. Is it good public policy to allow a manufacturer to ‘evergreen’ by changing dosages and making similar ‘inventions’ to keep a product under patent protection indefinitely?
Section 7(i) strikes a balance between the rights of doctors and their patients on the one hand and those of manufacturers on the other. With Israel’s pharmaceutical industry being heavily skewed towards generic manufacture it is certainly preferably politically to refuse a patent like this on grounds of inventive step rather than on patentable subject matter which could be viewed as protectionist.
That said, the issue of patentable subject matter is a ‘hot potato’ that may require updating from time to time, due to TRIPS, world wide developments and as economic issues change. Nevertheless, I think that interpreting claim 1 as not being a method of treatment goes beyond fair interpretation of the Law and as such, the revision should be for the Legislature not for a Commissioner of Patents to decide. That Dr. Noam has chosen to allow Swiss type claims is indicative of Patent Office Policy but should not be sufficient to overcome Section 7(i) which is a clear statement. In this regard however, it is noted that Israel Patent Law is not frequently the subject of Knesset debate, so creative interpretation is probably required to keep practice up to date.
The applicant is correct that a new dosage of an old treatment is patentable, but I believe this should be true only if the dosage is indeed new. If the dosage existed previously for a different administration regime, the pill is not new. Only the method of treatment is.
Teva Pharmaceuticals USA Inc. has agreed to suspend litigation over a compound patent for Eisai Co. Ltd.’s popular Alzheimer’s drug Aricept, thereby ending Teva’s attempts to manufacture and market a generic version of the drug before the patent expires in November.
Judge Garrett E. Brown Jr. of the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey signed off on the agreement Monday, and called for the case to be dismissed after the patent expires. However, the March 2008 preliminary injunction prohibiting Teva from manufacturing drugs including ingredients covered by the patent remains in effect.
Teva filed an abbreviated new drug application with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in 2008, and, when sued by Eisai, initially claimed that the patent was invalid due to obviousness, and later changed defence to claim inequitable conduct.
Teva had asked for communications not related to the patent-in-suit, but to seven co-pending patent applications that it claimed Eisai failed to disclose to the patent examiner in charge of the application that led to its Aricept patent-in-suit.
In December, Magistrate Judge Esther Salas denied Teva’s motion to compel discovery for its inequitable conduct defense. Teva, which sought communications between Eisai and the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, appealed to Judge Brown, but he affirmed Judge Salas’ order in June, that concluded that the generics maker’s discovery request was too broad and unduly burdensome.
Teva also sought discovery of communications between Eisai and the USPTO related to any abandoned patent applications that involved derivatives of benzylpiperidine, the active chemical in Aricept, on the grounds that they also might contain information to support the inequitable conduct defense. But Judge Salas said the patent applications were outside the scope of the companies’ current dispute and that expanding the search to include abandoned patent applications would “be a burden that outweighs the benefits to Teva.”
The patent-in-suit is U.S. Patent Number 4,895,841.
The case is Eisai Co. Ltd. et al. v. Teva Pharmaceuticals USA Inc. et al., case number 05-cv-05727, in the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey.
At the beginning of the month, Teva brought out a generic version of Bayer’s YAZ birth control pill to U.S. markets earlier than the drugmakers had previously agreed. In response, Bayer has filed a law suit.
Israel’s Teva, the world’s largest generics maker, launched the contraceptive under the brand name Gianvi. According to Teva, income from YAZ in the US for 2009 was $782 million and Teva claims a 180-day period of marketing exclusivity for introducing a generic version of the drug. Bayer in 2008 agreed to supply the pills to Teva in exchange for royalty payments, cutting its losses from cheaper competition. As part of that deal, Teva would not have launched YAZ in the U.S. before July 2011, unless other generics makers managed to enter the market earlier.
Now Watson and Novartis Sandoz have tried to market generic versions of YAZ in the U.S. and Teva apparently sees this as opening the door for them to do so as well. Bayer is suing Teva. According to estimates, following the generic drug release Bayer could lose 200 million euros ($243 million) in 2010 sales and 250 million euros in 2011.
The product group comprising Yasmin, YAZ and Yasminelle, all based on the hormones ethinylestradiol (estrogen) and drospirenone, are Bayer’s best-selling pharmaceutical product, generating 1.3 billion euros in revenues last year. Other competing hormone birth control drugs are manufactured by Johnson & Johnson and by Warner Chilcott.
Cenestin is a drug for the treatment of menopause symptoms, such as hot flashes and vaginal dryness. This prescription drug contains a mixture of synthetic estrogen hormones and works by replacing the estrogen that the ovaries no longer produce. It comes in tablet form and is taken once a day. Possible side effects include nausea, breast pain, and irregular vaginal bleeding or spotting.
Teva Women’s Health’s patent (the ’638 patent) is valid until 2015 but has been challenged by Watson Pharmaceuticals and by Paddock.
In an interesting development, Judge Leonard B. Sand of the U.S. District Court of the Southern District of New York granted Paddock summary judgment Tuesday, finding the doctrine of prosecution history estoppel prevented Teva from enforcing its patent.
Teva, as the world’s leading generic manufacturer, is used to going through patents with a fine tooth comb looking for problems. They are less experienced with patent prosecution and it must be galling to have their patents declared unenforceable.