• ABA The American Bar Association (ABA) section of Intellectual Property Law will be holding the 23rd Annual Intellectual Property Law Conference on April 10-12, 2008 in Arlington, Virginia.  Among the topics that will be covered at the conference are:

    • Are the Supreme Court and Federal Circuit on the Same Page For Patent Law?
    • 2021: A Patent Odyssey– Where Will Patent Reform Ultimately Take Us?
    • Latest Developments in the U.S. Patent Office
    • Litigation Skills- Representing Unpopular Defendants in IP Litigation
    • Patent Damages / Licensing
    • Playing the Patent Game in the Post-Seagate World
    • Death and Texas: How to Survive and Thrive in Patent Litigation in the Eastern District
    • Corporate Counsel Issues, Customs & Practices in IP Licensing

    On the first day of the conference, the luncheon speaker will be Chief Judge Paul R. Michel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, who will discuss patent law reform.  In addition, an evening reception will be held at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit.

    The tentative program for the conference can be found here.  The ABA has not yet announced the registration fee nor activated the conference's registration page, but we will provide additional information about the conference as it becomes available.

  •     By Kwame Mensah

    Logo
    PuriCore recently announced that it had been granted U.S. Patent No. 7,276,255, entitled "Wound and Ulcer Treatment with Super-Oxidized Water."  The ‘255 patent covers methods of treating an open wound with hypochlorous acid solutions at neutral or near-neutral pH.  The method includes two processes:  reducing wound bioburden and promoting tissue repair.  Research data submitted with the application show that the method of the invention creates a wound-healing environment by decreasing the bioburden of harmful microorganisms within the wound and by promoting skin cell proliferation and re-growth.

    The ‘255 patent is the first U.S. patent specifically related to wound therapy to be issued to PuriCore, whose research focuses on the control of infectious pathogens.  Commenting on the issuance of the ‘255 patent, PuriCore CEO Greg Bosch stated that "the granting of this patent complements our broad intellectual property portfolio focused on antimicrobial solutions and devices for producing these solutions."  In addition to the ‘255 patent, PuriCore’s patent portfolio comprises U.S. Patent No. 6,632,347 and recently-issued U.S. Patent No. 7,303,660.

    The ‘255 patent issued from U.S. Application Number 10/830,878, filed April 23, 2004.  Representative independent claims 1 and 18 of the ‘255 patent recite:

    1.  A method for treating an open wound in a human or animal body comprising administering to the open wound an output solution comprising hypochlorous acid, said output solution: having a pH of 4 to 7, a redox potential of >950 mV, and being obtained by electrochemical treatment of a saline solution; and wherein the output solution is administered in an amount effective to act as a biocide and permit cell proliferation for wound healing.

    18.  A method for treating an open wound in a mammal comprising administering to the open wound an output solution obtained by electrochemical treatment of a saline solution, the output solution comprising hypochlorous acid, having an available free chlorine concentration of about 144 mg/l to 400 mg/l, and having a pH of 4 to 7, wherein the output solution is administered in an amount effective to act as a biocide and permit cell proliferation for wound healing.

  •     By Christopher P. Singer

    Seattle_genetics_logo
    In a January 7, 2008 news release, Seattle Genetics, Inc. announced that it will receive a $4 million milestone payment from its collaboration with Genentech, Inc.  This payment arose as a result of Genentech’s initiation of a phase Ib clinical trial of SGN-40 in combination with Rituxan® (rituximab) for patients with relapsed follicular or marginal zone non-Hodgkin lymphoma.  According to Seattle Genetics, preclinical data in several non-Hodgkin lymphoma models indicates that the combination of SGN-40 and Rituxan may have enhanced activity compared to either agent alone.

    Genentech
    SGN-40 is a humanized monoclonal antibody that is currently in phase I and phase II clinical trials for non-Hodgkin lymphoma and multiple myeloma under a worldwide collaboration agreement with Genentech.  SGN-40 targets the CD40 antigen, which is expressed on most B lineage hematologic malignancies, as well as solid tumors such as bladder, renal, and ovarian cancer.  Seattle Genetics and Genentech have several other ongoing phase I and II trials relating to SGN-40 alone and in combination with other therapeutics.

    According to the press release, Seattle Genetics received an upfront payment of $60 million in February 2007, and is entitled to receive potential milestone payments exceeding $800 million and escalating double-digit royalties starting in the mid-teens on sales of SGN-40, under its collaboration agreement with Genentech.  More information about the Seattle Genetics antibody technology can be found here.

  •     By Jason Derry —

    Celltrion_2
    Celltrion, Inc. and CSL Limited have announced an agreement to develop and commercialize a monoclonal antibody for treating acute myeloid leukemia (AML).  The antibody, designated CSL 360, is currently in Phase 1 clinical trials in Australia.  CSL is a global, biopharmaceutical company located in Australia, having facilities throughout the world.  CSL focuses on developing protein-based medicines and vaccines.  Celltrion is a Korean Csl
    biopharmaceutical company that provides development and manufacturing services relative to biologics, such as recombinant proteins and antibodies.

    Jason Derry, Ph.D., who graduated with honors from DePaul University
    College of Law, is a molecular biologist and founding author of Patent Docs.

  •     By Donald Zuhn

    Proteologics
    Proteologics, Inc. announced today that it has been granted U.S. Patent No. 7,268,227.  The ‘227 patent is the second U.S. patent to be awarded to the Rehovot, Israel-based biopharmaceutical company.  According to the statement released by Proteologics, the ‘227 patent encompasses siRNA molecules that inhibit the expression of the antiviral drug target, hPOSH (human Plenty Of SH3 domains protein), a ubiquitin ligase that Proteologics identified as being essential for HIV biogenesis.

    Proteologics’ research focuses primarily on the discovery of inhibitors for specific ubiquitin enzymes — E3 ligases — and their interacting proteins, and the therapeutic use of such inhibitors.  Ubiquitin enzymes are known to play key roles in a variety of cell cycle and viral processes.  Dr. Avram Hershko and Dr. Aaron Ciechanover, who lead Proteologics’ scientific advisory board, were awarded the 2004 Nobel Prize in chemistry, along with Dr. Irwin Rose, for their discovery of the ubiquitin system.

    The ubiquitin system, in which proteins are covalently modified with ubiquitin (at left), is responsible for regulating most eukaryotic cellular processes, including transcriptional and cell cycle regulation, DNA repair, signal transduction, immune response, protein quality control, and metabolism.  This system of regulation is carried out by three enzymes:  E1, a ubiquitin-activating enzyme; E2, a ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme; and E3, a ubiquitin ligase that specifically recognizes proteins for ubiquitination and recruits E2 for the conjugation of ubiquitin.  Human E3, rather than being a single protein, is actually a family of hundreds of distinct proteins, each of which targets a small set of proteins for ubiquitination.  As a result of the essential physiological role of ubiquitination and the high degree of substrate specificity of the individual members of the E3 family, E3 ligases constitute attractive therapeutic targets.

    Proteologics’ ‘227 patent issued from U.S. Application No. 11/031,737, filed January 7, 2005, which is a divisional of U.S. Application No. 10/293,965, filed November 12, 2002, which issued as U.S. Patent No. 7,250,250, and which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Nos. 60/345,846, filed November 9, 2001, and No. 60/364,530, filed March 15, 2002.  Representative independent claim 1 of the ‘227 patent recites:

    1.  A composition comprising:
        (a) a first nucleic acid which
            (i) comprises between 5 and 100 nucleotides, of SEQ ID NO: 1 or a complement thereof, and
            (ii) decreases the level of a POSH mRNA and/or a POSH polypeptide when introduced into a cell, and
        (b) a pharmaceutically acceptable excipient.

  •     By Donald Zuhn

    Last November, on the heels of the Eastern District of Virginia’s decision to preliminarily enjoin the new continuation and claims rules, we offered a number of proposals that might help remedy the problems facing the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.  Among our proposed alternatives to the Patent Office’s draconian continuation and claims rules package were the implementation of an annuity system, the tailoring of patent protection and examination to the claimed subject matter or an applicant’s needs, the creation of regional patent offices, an increase in fees for continuation applications, the promulgation of the reporting requirements set forth in new Rule 78(f) (and as modified by the Office’s October 10, 2007 clarification of this rule), the creation of Japanese-style deferred examination, and a modification of the accelerated examination procedure currently in use.

    Uspto_seal_no_background
    While we offered a few of our own solutions, we also invited you to submit your suggestions.  With the GSK case about to reclaim patent law’s center stage, it seems like an approproate time to turn to your suggestions.  Among the solutions that Patent Docs readers proposed were the following (which we have attempted to group into a few categories):

    Continuation/RCE and claims fees:

    • Charge increasing fees for successive continuation or RCE filings (e.g., a second continuation or RCE would cost 125% of the standard filing fee, a third continuation or RCE would cost 150% of the standard fiing fee, and a fourth continuation or RCE would cost 200% of the standard filing fee).
    • Charging increasing fees for additional claims or groups of claims (e.g., three independent and twenty total claims would be included in the standard filing fee, six independent and forty total claims would cost twice the standard filing fee, and nine independent and sixty total claims would cost three times the standard filing fee).
    • Encourage the use of multiply dependent claims by reducing or eliminating the multiple dependent claim fee (currently $185-370).

    Information Disclosure Statements:

    • Charge increasing fees for additional references submitted with an Information Disclosure Statement (e.g., twenty references could be submitted at no additional cost, references 21-50 could be submitted at $25 a piece, and references 51 and above could be submitted at $100 a piece).  The reader making this suggestion also proposed exempting some references (e.g., those being cited in priority applications or those being cited in corresponding foreign applications) from such a fee schedule.
    • Charge a "modest" fee (e.g., $5-10) for each reference submitted with an Information Disclosure Statement.
    • Expand the Peer to Patent project whereby the public is invited to submit references to the Patent Office.
    • Eliminate the duty to disclose references altogether.

    Examination:

    • Give examiners more time to examine applications that contain more claims.
    • Charge a fee for additional time spent examining an application (akin to the billable hours with which patent attorneys and their clients are so familiar).  The reader offering this proposal also suggested that an applicant be permitted to pay a fee to obtain examination by a second examiner.
    • Encourage examiners to conduct telephonic interviews to expedite prosecution rather than mail out repetitious Office actions.
    • Outsource search and/or examination.
    • Charge increasing fees for more complex and time-consuming searches.
    • Fix the Patent Office’s "count" system by which examiner performance is measured (e.g., award a count for the first action issued on a continuation but not for the abandonment of the prior-filed application, award a count for the first action issued on an RCE rather than for the filing of the RCE, and award two counts for abandoned applications or allowances that do not result in subsequent continuations).

    Patent Office administration:

    • The Director and Deputy Director must have five or more years of non-PTO experience as a patent and/or trademark professional prior to appointment.
    • The Commissioner for Patents must have five or more years of non-PTO experience as a patent professional prior to his or her appointment.
    • The Office of Enrollment and Discipline director must have five or more years of non-PTO experience practicing as a registered practitioner prior to appointment.

    Other proposals:

    • Eliminate fee diversion.
    • Hire more examiners.
    • Increase examiner salaries.
    • Move from "first to invent" to "first to file" system.
    • Eliminate fee reductions for small entities.
    • Eliminate requests not to publish and publish all applications within one-month of filing, thereby improving the quality of pre-filing searches conducted for subsequently filed applications.

    So, readers, what do you think about these proposals?

  •     By Kevin E. Noonan

    Once recombinant cells were deemed to constitute patentable subject matter by the U.S. Supreme Court in Diamond v. Chakrabarty, fundamental properties of such cells began to pose new challenges to traditional patent law concepts.  One such property is that these cells were capable of replicating to produce copies of themselves.  Unlike mechanical devices that are governed by conventional distinctions between repairing a patented device and reconstructing it (see Aro Manufacturing Co., Inc. v. Convertible Top Replacement Co., Inc., 365 U.S. 336 (1961)), the nature of a recombinant cell is to produce more recombinant cells.  To paraphrase an old adage, if you give a man a recombinant cell (or, more typically, about 10,000,000 recombinant cells), you have given him recombinant cells forever.

    This unique property of cells has raised some interesting legal questions.  For example, in Amgen v. Elanex Pharmaceuticals, an inventor at the defendant’s licensor, the University of Washington, had produced a recombinant cell line producing human erythropoietin prior to the grant date of Amgen’s patent (U.S. Patent No. 4,703,008) claiming EPO-producing recombinant cells (see 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22015 (W.D. Washington 1996)).  Large numbers of these cells were grown and frozen in liquid nitrogen and kept as a cell bank, also prior to Amgen’s patent grant date.  One basis for Amgen’s infringement action on this patent was that Elanex thawed vials of these cells, grew them in culture, and shipped aliquots of these cells to Canada.  Elanex took the position that the term "making" in the language of 35 U.S.C. § 271(a) defining infringement did not apply to these activities, since the recombinant cells were "made" (i.e., transformed with an EPO-encoding vector) prior to Amgen’s patent, and its use of the frozen cells to "grow up" additional cells was merely the result of a "natural process" and thus non-infringing.  Amgen contended that the act of taking a frozen aliquot of recombinant cells, growing them and thus producing additional recombinant cells, was a "making" of these additional cells under the plain meaning of the statute.  The District Court decided that, in either case, Elanex undeniably "used" the frozen, infringing cells, and granted summary judgment to Amgen.

    In other contexts, the question arises with relation to sales of a recombinant cell.  It is almost without question that the sale of a sample of a recombinant cell does not give the purchaser the right to make unlimited quantities of the recombinant cells and sell them to others, absent an express agreement permitting such sales.  And yet, recombinant cells cannot be "used" effectively without some cell growth and amplification.  These aspects need to be considered in recombinant cell purchasing agreements and licenses of the technology, and generally such considerations have been taken into account when cells and nucleic acid vectors are provided by vendors.  (It is commonplace, for example for such reagents to contain so-called "label licenses" prohibiting diagnostic use absent an additional license; this practice has been notorious with regard to the polymerase chain reaction, for example.)

    The same issues arise with recombinant plants, particularly seeds.  This problem has arisen before, during the "green revolution" of the 1960’s, when U.S. seed companies provided agricultural aid and assistance to third-world countries.  This "aid" included hybrid strains of common plants like corn, wheat, soybeans, and rice, which were developed to take advantage of the "hybrid vigor" found in the phenotype of these plants.  An additional feature of this aid was creation of a continuing customer stream, since the hybrid plants were typically infertile, requiring farmers to purchase new seed each growing season.  This feature of U.S. farm aid programs produced ill feeling and a backlash against such hybrid seed, despite the increased yields (at least several-fold) farmers would typically obtain over conventional seed (see John Seabrook, Annals of Agriculture, "Sowing for Apocalypse," The New Yorker, August 14, 2007).

    Monsanto
    The modern-day equivalent of this dispute is over genetically-modified crops.  A major case involving the limits of the restrictions a company can place on after-sale use of seed as a patented article is Monsanto Co. v. McFarling.  Specifically, the issue in the McFarling case is using seeds from recombinant plants to produce additional plants in one year from seed obtained the previous year.  Monsanto sells patented seeds to a variety of crop plants, including soybeans, that are resistant to Monsanto’s Roundup® glyphosphate herbicide.  These sales are conditioned by an agreement, termed the "Technology Agreement" (signed in this case by the defendant) that requires purchasers to pay a one-time license fee of $6.50 per 50 lb. bag, and agreeing not to plant themselves, or supply to others, "saved" seeds, i.e., seeds produced from the originally purchased seeds.  Just like with the hybrid seeds sold during the "green revolution" a generation ago, this system ensured that farmers purchase and license Roundup Ready® soybean seeds each planting season.  Roundup Ready® seeds are sold at a cost of about $20 per bag.

    Roundup_ready_soybeans
    As reported earlier this year on Patent Docs, the Federal Circuit affirmed a District Court finding that McFarling infringed Monsanto’s U.S. Patent No. 5,352,605 over two growing seasons, with damages in the amount of $40 per bag.  The Court held that this amount was justified, despite it being higher than the liquidated damages provisions in the sales agreement, and affirmed a total jury award of $375,000 against McFarling, an individual farmer.

    Lemley_mark_001
    McFarling petitioned the Supreme Court for a writ of certiorari, being represented (as he was before the Federal Circuit) by patent academic Mark Lemley (at left) of Stanford.  The question was presented to the Court in two parts:

    1.  In determining a "reasonable royalty" under the patent-damages statute, 35 U.S.C. § 284, may the factfinder award the patentee either:
        (a) a hypothetically negotiated royalty that vastly exceeds the established royalty charged in the marketplace, or
        (b) a royalty that includes damages to the patentee’s third-party distributors and is intended to force the infringer to disgorge his profits-even though Congress eliminated the equitable disgorgement remedy in 1946?

    2.  Do the doctrines of patent exhaustion and patent misuse permit the purchaser of a patented good to use that good and dispose of its products as it sees fit, absent a valid contract?

    With regard to Question #2 of his Petition, McFarling argued that the infringing seed were a "natural product" of the seeds he had purchased, and that the doctrines of patent exhaustion and patent misuse precluded Monsanto from recovering for patent infringement.  (In the District Court, Monsanto had abandoned its breach-of-contract claims under the Technology Agreement, and the damage award was based solely on patent infringement liability.)  The Petition characterized replanting seeds as the "ordinary and expected use" of the patented seed product, and thus that a determination of infringement was contrary to settled principles of patent exhaustion (but see Rich, G.S., 6th Annual Conference on Intellectual Property Law and Policy, Fordham University, April 16, 1998, in Chisum et al., Principles of Patent Law: Cases and Materials, 2d Ed., New York: Foundation Press, 2001, pp. 1120-21).  Appealing to the Court’s recent penchant for exercising its supervisory authority over the Federal Circuit’s patent jurisprudence (see "Is It Time for the Supreme Court to Stop Flogging the Federal Circuit?"), the Petition argued that the McFarling decision "completes the Federal Circuit’s decades-long effort to circumscribe this Court’s patent exhaustion precedent."

    In support, the Petition cites Adams v. Burke, 84 U.S. 453 (1873) and U.S. v. Univis Lens Co., 316 U.S. 241 (1942).  While certainly the lead cases in this area, their value as current precedent has been questioned, for example, by the authors of the Chisum volume, who opine that:

    Readers of these cases must remember that Univis was written in the tumultuous legal environment of the post depression New Deal era during which intellectual property laws and other industrial practices were markedly affected by new and expanding antitrust doctrines.  The 1952 Patent Act revived contributory infringement, substantially narrowed patent misuse, and thereby statutorily overruled cases doctrinally related to Univis [citations omitted].  And it is likely that Univis would not be decided the same today.

    The McFarling Petition relies most heavily on the Univis case, making the strained analogy between the seeds in Monsanto and the eyeglass lens blanks in Univis that were used by the purchaser to make eyeglasses.  And according to the Petition, "the self-replicating nature of the invention itself means that the exhaustion doctrine gives the buyer an implied license to grow more seeds by planting the purchased seeds in the ground."  The Petition fails, however, to cite any legal basis for such an "implied license," except insofar as it exists in the minds (and pens) of academic commentators.  The Petition would have the Court dismiss any restrictions on further use of the patented seed as a matter of patent law, and banish any restrictions to label licenses or other contractual limitations imposed on the sale of patented seed (or, presumably, any other "self-replicating" biological product where replication is a "natural result" of their use).

    Supreme_court_courtroom_c
    The Supreme Court’s decision to let stand, without comment, the decision of the lower courts in the McFarling case is good news for biotechnology patent owners, who might have anticipated that the Court would take yet another opportunity to review (and presumably reject or modify) Federal Circuit precedent on this issue.  The decision, and the damages award, serves as necessary impediments to infringers who would rather have their lawyers craft clever legal arguments than abide by their agreements and respect patent rights.  It is true, as McFarling’s Petition alleges, that the Federal Circuit has been engaged in a "decades-long effort," but that effort has been directed towards bringing consistency to U.S. patent law, often with variable and imperfect results.  But perhaps the Supreme Court’s decision not to interfere with the decision in the McFarling case is an indication that, having reinforced its own primacy in this as in all matters of Federal law, the Supreme Court may be content to permit a (presumably) chastened Federal Circuit to get back to its Congressional mandate:  to establish the type of legal certainty to patent law needed by high technology businesses, and their investors, that has so greatly benefited the American economy over the past quarter century.

  •     By Sherri Oslick

    Gavel_38
    About
    Court Report:  Each week we will report briefly on recently filed
    biotech and pharma cases, and a few interesting cases will be selected
    for periodic monitoring.


    Astrazeneca Pharmaceuticals LP et al. v. Mylan Pharmaceuticals Inc.

    1:07-cv-00177; filed December 28, 2007 in the Northern District of West Virginia

    Astrazeneca Pharmaceuticals LP et al. v. Aurobindo Pharma Limited, Inc. et al.
    3:07-cv-06020; filed December 18, 2007 in the District Court of New Jersey

    Infringement of U.S. Patent No. RE37,314 ("Pyrimidine Derivatives," issued August 7, 2001) following a paragraph IV certification as part of Aurobindo’s filing of an ANDA to manufacture a generic version of AstraZeneca’s Crestor® (rosuvastatin calcium, used to treat high cholesterol).  The complaints in these cases are substantially identical.  View the Aurobindo complaint here.


    Sepracor Inc. et al. v. Sandoz, Inc.

    3:07-cv-06107; filed December 26, 2007 in the District Court of New Jersey

    Infringement of U.S. Patent Nos. 7,214,683 ("Compositions of Descarboethoxyloratadine," issued May 8, 2007) and 7,214,684 ("Methods for the Treatment of Allergic Rhinitis," issued May 8, 2007), licensed to Schering-Plough, following a paragraph IV certification as part of Sandoz’s filing of an ANDA to manufacture a generic version of Schering-Plough’s Clarinex® (desloratidine, used to treat allergies).  View the complaint here.


    Santarus Inc. et al. v. Par Pharmaceutical Inc.

    1:07-cv-00827; filed December 20, 2007 in the District Court of Delaware

    Infringement of U.S. Patent Nos. 6,699,885 ("Substituted Benzimidazole Dosage Forms and Methods of Using Same," issued March 2, 2004), 6,489,346 (same title, issued December 3, 2002), 6,645,988 (same title, issue November 11, 2003), and 6,780,882 (same title, issued August 24, 2004) following a paragraph IV certification as part of Par’s filing of an ANDA to manufacture a generic version of Santarus’ Zegerid® powder for oral suspension (omeprazole/sodium bicarbonate, used to treat heartburn and other symptoms associated with gastroesophageal reflux disease).  View the complaint here.


    Monsanto Company et al. v. Tidball et al.

    4:07-cv-02079; filed December 20, 2007 in the Eastern District of Missoui

    Monsanto Company et al. v. Wagoner
    1:07-cv-00952; filed December 17, 2007 in the Middle District of North Carolina

    Infringement of U.S. Patent Nos. 5,352,605 ("Chimeric Genes for Transforming Plant Cells Using Viral Promoters," issued October 4, 1994) and RE39,247 ("Glyphosate-tolerant 5-enolpyruvylshikimate-3-phosphate Synthases," issued August 22, 2006) based on defendant’s use of soybean seed produced from earlier planted Roundup Ready® soybean seed.  View the Tidball complaint here
    and the Wagoner complaint here.


    Janssen, L.P. et al. v. KV Pharmaceutical Company

    1:07-cv-00825; filed December 18, 2007 in the District Court of Delaware

    Janssen, L.P. et al. v. KV Pharmaceutical Company
    3:07-cv-05982; filed December 14, 2007 in the District Court of New Jersey

    Infringement of U.S. Patent No. 7,160,559 ("Controlled Release Galantamine Composition," issued January 9, 2007) following a paragraph IV certification as part of KV’s filing of an ANDA to manufacture a generic version of Janssen’s Razadyne ER®  (formerly Reminyl®) (galantamine hydrobromide, used to treat mild to moderate dementia of the Alzheimer’s type).  The complaints in these cases are substantially identical.  View the Delaware complaint here.

  •     By Sherri Oslick

    Gavel_39
    About
    Court Report:  Each week we will report briefly on recently filed
    biotech and pharma cases, and a few interesting cases will be selected
    for periodic monitoring.


    Aventis Pharma S.A. et al. v. Hospira, Inc.

    2:07-cv-08137; filed December 14, 2007 in the Central District of California

    Infringement of U.S. Patent No. RE38,743 ("Mixtures of Particular LMW Heparinic Polysaccharides for the Prophylaxis/Treatment of Acute Thrombotic Events," issued June 14, 2005; reissue of U.S. Patent No. 5,389,618) following a paragraph IV certification as part of Hospira’s filing of an ANDA to manufacture a generic version of Aventis’ Lovenox® (enoxaparin sodium injection, used for the prophylaxis and treatment of thromboembolic disease).  View the complaint here.  [NB: In an earlier case the ‘743 patent was held unenforceable; that decision is currently pending on appeal with the Federal Circuit.]


    Sciele Pharma Inc. et al. v. Mylan Pharmaceuticals Inc. et al.

    1:07-cv-00818; filed December 14, 2007 in the District Court of Delaware

    Infringement of U.S. Patent No. 4,892,741 ("Press coated DHP tablets," issued January 9, 1990) following a paragraph IV certification as part of Mylan’s amendment of their ANDA (adding additional dosage forms) to manufacture a generic version of Sciele’s Sular® (nisoldipine, used to treat hypertension).  View the complaint here.  As reported here, Sciele has previously asserted this patent against Mylan in response to Mylan’s initial paragraph IV certification.


    Duramed Pharmaceuticals, Inc. v. Sandoz Inc.

    3:07-cv-05940; filed December 13, 2007 in the District Court of New Jersey

    Infringement of U.S. Patent No. RE39,861 ("Methods of Extended Use Oral Contraception," issued September 25, 2007) following a paragraph IV certification as part of defendants’ filing of an ANDA to manufacture a generic version of Duramed’s Seasonale® (estrogen and progestin, used for oral contraception).  View the complaint here.


    Duramed Pharmaceuticals, Inc. v. Watson Pharma, Inc. et al.

    3:07-cv-05941; filed December 13, 2007 in the District Court of New Jersey

    Infringement of U.S. Patent No. RE39,861 ("Methods of Extended Use Oral Contraception," issued September 25, 2007) based on Watson’s manufacture and sale of its Quasense®, allegedy a generic version of Duramed’s Seasonale® (estrogen and progestin, used for oral contraception).  View the complaint here.


    Pfizer Inc. et al. v. Teva Pharmaceuticals USA, Inc.

    1:07-cv-11198; filed December 12, 2007 in the Southern District of New York

    Infringement of U.S. Patent Nos. 5,382,600 ("3,3-Diphenylpropylamines and Pharmaceutical Compositions Thereof, issued January 17, 1995), 6,630,162 ("Pharmaceutical Formulation and Its Use," issued October 7, 2003), and 6,770,295 ("Therapeutic Formulation for Administering Tolterodine with Controlled Release," issued August 3, 2004) following a paragraph IV certification as part of Teva’s filing of an ANDA to manufacture a generic version of Pfizer’s Detrol LA® (extended release tolterodine tartrate, used to treat overactive bladder).  View the complaint here.


    Novartis Corporation et al. v. Mylan Laboratories Inc. et al.

    2:07-cv-05930; filed December 11, 2007 in the District Court of New Jersey

    Infringement of U.S. Patent No. 6,162,802 ("Synergistic Combination Therapy Using Benazepril and Amlodipine for the Treatment of Cardiovascular Disorders and Compositions Therefor," issued December 19, 2000) following a second paragraph IV notification letter stating that Mylan’s ANDA to manufacture a generic version of Novartis’ Lotrel® (amlodipine besylate/benazepril hydrochloride, used to treat hypertension) was directed to an additional dosage form not mentioned in the initial notification letter.  View the complaint here.  Novartis previously filed suit against Mylan in response to the initial notification letter as reported here.

    Note to our Readers:  Court Report is being presented in two parts this week.  Part II will be posted tomorrow.

  •     By Kwame Mensah

    Cyplasin
    Last November, Cyplasin Biomedical Ltd. announced that it had been granted U.S. Patent No. 7,271,242, entitled "Cytotoxic Cyplasin of the SeaHare, Aplysia punctata, cDNA Cloning and Expression of Bioreactive Recombinants."  The ‘242 patent covers the production of cytotoxic cyplasin by mammalian cells and the use of this protein for treating cancer.  According to Cyplasin’s Chief Scientific Officer Professor Christian Petzelt the company will use the technology encompassed by the ‘242 patent, as well as that encompassed by another Cyplasin patent issued in 2001 (U.S. Patent No. 6,171,818), to further develop cyplasin’s selective ability to rapidly kill certain types of cancer cells while leaving normal non-cancerous cells untouched.

    The ‘242 patent issued from U.S. Application No. 10/501,098, filed December 18, 2002.  Representative claims 1, 2, and 4 of the ‘242 patent recite:

    1.  An isolated protein encoded by a nucleic acid molecule selected from the group consisting of: a) a nucleic acid molecule encoding a protein comprising the amino acid sequence from position 20 or 53 to 558 of SEQ ID NO: 1; b) a nucleic acid molecule comprising the sequence of SEQ ID NO: 5; and c) a nucleic acid molecule, the sequence of which deviates from the nucleic acid sequences specified in (a) or (b) due to the degeneration of the genetic code, wherein said protein lacks a functional secretory signal sequence.

    2.  A pharmaceutical composition comprising a protein of claim 1.

    4.  The protein of claim 1, wherein the protein is cyplasin with a deleted or non-functional signal sequence.