ARIAD v. LILLY – A Modest Proposal – Should Screening be Enough?

March 5th, 2010

As the Fed. Cir. prepares to issue an en banc opinion on the existence and role of the written description requirement in section 112, it seems like a time for reflection. After taking the position that enablement should suffice for many years, it seems that at least the first part of Ariad’s brief requesting rehearing should resonant more fully, but it didn’t: “the measure of the sufficiency of the written description in meeting the conditions of patentability in paragraph 1 of that statute depends solely on whether it enables any person skilled in the art … to make and use the claimed invention…..” But should that be the interpretation of the statute that gets carved into stony precedent. What will it unleash?

Let’s try to walk in Ariad’s shoes (or actually, wear the lab coats of the MIT, Harvard and Whitehead group) as it uncovered the NF-kB signaling pathway in the 80’s. The group of eminent researchers realized that down-regulating the pathway would be useful to treat a variety of conditions, but they didn’t have any agents in hand that would work, at least not in a practical manner, e.g., as marketable drugs.  So what they had just prior to filing their first application in 1986 was a very useful research tool. But instead of quickly obtaining claims to a method to screen for drugs that would inhibit the NF-kB pathway, they pursued broad claims to reducing NF-kB activity in cells by, in some cases, reducing binding of NF-kB to NF-kB recognition sites on genes which are regulated by NF-kB. Treating certain pathologies is also claimed, but no NF-kB agents are recited in the claims up on appeal.

The attorneys for these institutions refile the application in various forms about ten times, before receiving US Pat No 6,410,526 in 2002. In the intervening years, Lilly uses the (unpatented) screening method to identify drugs, including Xigris, which is used to treat sepsis. Soon after the ‘526 patent issues, Ariad sues Lilly and wins a jury verdict that is promptly reversed by a panel of the Fed. Cir. The panel essentially relied on the 2004 decision in U. of Rochester v. Searle, in which another “mechanism of action” claim was invalidated for failure to meet the WDR, since, like the U. of Rochester, “Ariad must still describe some method of performing the claimed methods.” In the Rochester decision, the court also noted the early-on presence of screening claims, by which specific COX-2 inhibitors could be identified, and suggested that they would have been valid. Fed. Cir. panels have been pretty clear on this standard for some time now. In re Alonso, 88 USPQ2d 1849, the panel endorsed a Board decision which reasoned that, to meet the WDR, “it is not enough merely to disclose a method of making and identifying compounds capable of being used to practice the invention”.

I think there is a separate written description requirement in 112, that is separate, not from enablement, but from the requirement that the specification teach how to make and use the invention. Apart from pharma/biotech, consider a patent on a new golf club head that has a series of figure showing the configuration of the various surfaces of the club head. Now anyone can make and use that club head, without a single word of written description. But in the world of pharma/biotech, Rochester and Ariad are arguing that if we teach how to identify and use a drug that affects mechanism-of-action x, we have done enough, and are entitled to a claim that will dominate claims to drugs developed in the future and the use and sale of drugs developed before we obtained mechanism-of-use claims that don’t even recite that drugs are used, let alone specific drugs.

What is the alternative? Not all mechanism-of-action claims are as “naked” as the Rochester or Ariad claims. Often there are some working examples. The elevation of the WDR began with UC v Lilly, but there is no doubt that that decision would be decided differently today, even if history will decide that it was decided correctly at the time. The University of California had cDNA encoding mouse insulin and tried to claim cDNA encoding human insulin. The specification adequately taught how to make and use. The panel held that the specification failed to meet the WDR because the claimed cDNA was not adequately described, but factually this was just wrong. A claim to cDNA encoding x (when the structure of x is known) is not a purely functional claim. Today that claim would be invalid as obvious over the structure of x and the Cloning Manual, if the structure of x (or even x per se) was in the prior art. But I think UC adequately described what they were claiming and taught how to make and use – ergo, enablement. Read the elegant and lengthy specification of the ‘526 patent and the description part of the invention just is not there, or at least, there is not enough “there there”. Not “‘nuff said.”

I will leave you with a final question. I think it is the one that Judge Linn, is his opinion in the Ariad panel decision, wants the court to address. The hypothetical specification has 100 working examples of what we will call  YBY antagonist agents, all structurally set forth. They are useful to treat sepsis. The claim at issue reads: A method of treating sepsis by administering an effective amount of a YBY antagonist agent to a human afflicted with, or at risk of, sepsis. I have already discussed why this type of claim can be called a Hail Mary claim (it may encompass anticipatory prior art). But given that it also encompasses  and dominates any YBY antagonist that will be developed for, say, the next 15 years, IS THIS TYPE OF CLAIM EVER VALID? I face for your answer. It may come soon.

Hearing fixed for “Broccoli” and “Tomatoes” cases before the EPO Enlarged Board of Appeal, G 0002/07 and G 0001/08

February 22nd, 2010

Post from Paul Cole

The EPC prohibits patents for essentially biological processes and the referred questions relate to the degree and nature of human technical intervention, which is necessary for that provision not to apply.  Case G 0002/07 “Broccoli” concerns EP-B-1 069 819 Plant Bioscience Limited  which has been opposed by Syngenta Participations AG and Groupe Limagrain Holding, referring decision T 0083/05. The patent relates to methods for producing new Brassica plants, in particular broccoli, with elevated levels of anticarcinogenic glucosinolates. The claimed method involves the selective, molecular marker assisted breeding of “double haploid” breeding lines of broccoli with wild Brassica oleracea species.

Case G 0001/08 “Tomatoes” concerns EP-B-1211926 State of Israel Minister of Agriculture and is opposed by Unilever NV, referring decision T 1242/06.

The two cases have been consolidated in view of the similarity of the issues raised.

The hearing is to take place in Munich on 20 and 21st July 2010.

Yes, Judge Michel, There have been some WDR Appeals!

February 22nd, 2010

During oral argument before the Fed. Cir. in Ariad v. Lilly, as reported by Patently-O, the government attorney was pressed for specific evidence that a separate WDR “is necessary for USPTO to perform its examination function”, e.g., that it serves a practical function. Chief Judge Michel was quoted thusly:

“I can’t remember ever seeing a patent office rejection that was based only on the failure of written description. I’m not saying there aren’t any, but the flow of cases that come through this court at three or four hundred a year, it is exceedingly rare that the patent office hangs its case on written description. I can’t remember a single case.”

The government’s attorney, Mr. Freeman, couldn’t either. To the contrary, those of us in the prep/pros trenches should be able to recall a few that made it to the Fed. Cir. from the Board, “based only on the failure of written description.” It took me five minutes in my not-very-well-organized WDR file to locate In re Wallach, 378 F.3d 1330 (Fed. Cir. 2004)(“Without amino acid sequence, or with only partial sequence, a nucleic acid molecule’s structures cannot be determined and the WDR is consequently not met.”); In re Alonso, 88 USPQ 1849 (Fed. Cir 2008)(Claim to use of any Mab to human neurofibrosarcoma to NFS based on one example fails WDR.) and Capon v. Eschhar and Dudas, 418 F.3d 1349 (Fed. Cir 2005)(Claims based on combining known gene fragments do not per se fail WDR. Remanded for evaluation of support for generic claims). In re Alton, 76 F.3d 1168 (Fed. Cir 1996) is bit more aged, but it is oft-cited for the proposition that it is error to disregard factual evidence relating to the adequacy of the WD in a specification. These are not obscure decisions – their impact is/was not “minuscule” and, to top off the irony tank, Judge Michel was on the panel that decided Alonso and Alton.

Can any one else add to this list (remember, failure to meet WDR must be the ONLY issue on appeal from the Board)?

Sustained release fluvastatin formulations – The UK Court of Appeal opinion in Activis UK Limited v Novartis AG [2010] EWCA Civ 82

February 19th, 2010

Post from Paul Cole

Sometimes a decision as to obviousness hinges on a single short point. In Graham v John Deere, the tipping point testimony was during cross-examination of the witness for the patentee, when he said that the allegedly inventive feature made no significant difference to the operation of the device. Once that evidence had been given, the outcome was inevitable, and references to Thomas Jefferson, though decorative, were mere dicta.

The controversy concerning the fluvastatin sustained release patent EP-B-0948320 (UK) falls into the same category. The patent was based on the premise that fluvastatin was so water-soluble that it was difficult to devise a sustained release formulation. Claim 1 as amended read:

A sustained release pharmaceutical composition comprising a water soluble salt of fluvastatin as active ingredient and being selected from the group consisting of matrix formulations, diffusion-controlled membrane coated formulations and combinations thereof, wherein the sustained release formulation releases the active ingredient over more than 3 hours.

The tipping point fact was that fluvastatin was not of such extreme water-solubility as to give rise to the difficulties alleged. After that had been established, the whole basis for patentability collapsed, as explained concisely by Jacob L.J. at the conclusion of his opinion, which also contains an implied warning that although it may be appropriate to rely on an earlier decision for a rule of law, the facts on which that earlier decision was reached are of little relevance:

Once the obstacle put forward in the Patent against being able to make a sustained formulation was shown to be illusory, then a sustained release formulation is obvious. You might get better efficacy or fewer side effects, but you would certainly get better compliance. In Pozzoli terms the only difference between the prior art and the claim is the idea of making a sustained release formulation. For that there was a technical motivation and no difficulty, real or apparent.

The PSA [problem-solution analysis] gives the same answer. What is the objective problem? Why that which the patentee himself stated – to produce a sustained release form of fluvastatin. Was the solution obvious? Yes, any of the standard methods for such formulations would clearly work: there is no reason why they would not.

There is no need and it would be wrong to re-formulate the problem as suggested by Mr. Meade. This is not a case where some prior art unknown to the patentee has turned up. Nor is it right to reformulate the problem as one of looking for better medical effects when that was not the problem as seen by the patentee or to reformulate the solution as having found such effects when the patentee has not promised any.

In the latter respect this case is quite unlike the case, relied upon by Mr. Meade, about a sustained release form of oxycodone recently considered by this court, Napp v Ratiopharm [2009] EWCA Civ 252, [2009] RPC 539. Oxycodone was, until the patent, known as a minor weak opiod generally administered, to the extent that it was administered at all, as a co-drug. The slow-release form transformed it, as the patent said, into a serious alternative to morphine – something that was wholly unexpected. Of course the invention was non-obvious.

The upshot is that I would uphold the decision of the Judge. Unlike him, however, I do not think the case was finely balanced. Once the basis of the Patent was proved illusory there was nothing left to save it.

Jacob L.J.’s opinion contains a lengthy discussion of the respective approaches to inventive step of the UK courts under Windsurfing/Pozzoli and of the EPO approach using PSA which may be valuable to students and has been praised as “a tutorial in the law of obviousness”. Readers may recall John Mortimer’s fictional barrister Rumpole, who knew little law, but was an expert on bloodstains and used his instinct for tipping point facts with devastating effect in the cases for which he was responsible. No magic touchstone is to be found either in the USA under Graham/KSR or in the UK under Windsurfing/Pozzoli because in both jurisdictions after certain mandatory preliminary enquiries the issue has to be decided on a case by case basis according to the evidence and without the distortion introduced by preconceptions in the mind of the decision-maker. The legal background is only a guide as to the appropriate enquiries to be made and what matters is the evidence as to the tipping point facts, of which in the present case there was only one.