Thursday, September 2, 2010

Sun Pharmaceuticals v. Eli Lilly: The Creeping Expansion of the Doctrine of Obviousness-Type Double Patenting

In Sun v. Eli Lilly, a panel of the Federal Circuit held a Lilly patent claiming use of the drug gemcitabine (GEMZAR) for the treatment of cancer invalid for obviousness-type double patenting, in view of an earlier Lilly patent claiming the drug per se and its originally discovered use as an antiviral agent. The invalidated patent was set to expire on November 7, 2012, 2.5 years after the expiration of the patent claiming the drug active ingredient (May 15, 2010), so this could result in a substantial reduction in Lilly’s period of marketing exclusivity. Lilly is currently seeking en banc reconsideration by the Federal Circuit.

Sun represents the most recent in a series of Federal Circuit decisions expanding the scope of the judge made doctrine of obviousness type double patenting. In this article, I briefly summarize the history of the expansion, and outline why I think the court should take this opportunity to reconsider the implications of these cases en banc.

Eli Lilly's patent prosecution decisions that resulted in a finding of obviousness type double patenting

It is informative to review the facts of the case. In the early 1980s, a Lilly scientist invented a method for synthesizing a genus of chemical compounds including gemcitabine, something others had previously attempted but failed to accomplish. He also showed that the compound had antiviral activity. Lilly filed a patent application disclosing the genus of chemical compounds and their use as antiviral agents.

The original inventor of the compound, along with a second Lilly inventor, then discovered that gemcitabine has anticancer activities, so these inventors filed a second application claiming methods of using the drug to treat cancer. This application did not claim priority to the first application.

On the same day Lilly filed the second application, it also filed a CIP of the first application. In retrospect, this was a critical mistake. The CIP was apparently filed to expand upon the definition of the disclosed genus of compounds, basically by adding to it species wherein certain R groups could be hydrogens. Significantly, this added disclosure was not necessary in order to patent gemcitabine, since gemcitabine was disclosed in the originally filed patent application.

At that time, there was some uncertainty with respect to the extent to which it was necessary to update the best mode when filing a CIP application (this uncertainty was ultimately addressed in 1994 in Transco). In any event, presumably in an attempt to ensure compliance with the best mode requirement, Lilly also added disclosure of the anticancer properties of the chemical compounds in the CIP.

Ultimately, the CIP application resulted in a patent claiming the drug active ingredient as a composition of matter, and also methods of using it as an antiviral agent. Later, the second patent application issued with claims to methods of using the drug to treat cancer. In Sun v. Lilly, it was the disclosure of anticancer activity added to the first patent by means of the CIP application which was used as the basis for invalidating the second patent claiming that use. In the next section, I explain why this represents a significant expansion of the doctrine of obviousness type double patenting.

The creeping expansion of obviousness type double patenting

The Federal Circuit has established a two-step process for analyzing obviousness type double patenting. First, the court construe the claims in the earlier patent and the claims in the later patent, and determines the differences. Second, it determines whether those differences render the claims patentably distinct.

One fundamental distinction between analysis for obviousness under section 103 and obviousness type double patenting is that when analyzing for double patenting only the claims of the two patents are to be considered. As the Federal Circuit stated in 1992 in General Foods v. Studiengesellschaft Kohle, its "precedent makes clear that the disclosure of a patent cited in support of a double patenting rejection cannot be used as though it were prior art.”

However, in the 2002 decision of Geneva v. GSK, the Federal Circuit began chipping away at this prohibition against using the written description of the earlier patent to invalidate the second patent, and embarked upon what has become a creeping expansion of the doctrine. In that case, the earlier patent claimed a drug active ingredient. The written description portion of the earlier patent also describes a method of using the drug to treat a disease, but significantly, this use of the drug is never mentioned in the patent claims. Nonetheless, the panel used this disclosure in the written description of the first patent to invalidate a second patent claiming that method of use.

This seems to fly in the face of General Foods and the controlling case law. However, the Geneva panel justified its decision to go outside the claims of the first patent in its analysis by reasoning that the claim in the earlier patent "is drawn to a compound having a certain physical property," and thus, "[s[tanding alone, that claim does not adequately disclose the patentable bounds of the invention. Therefore, this court examines the specifications of those patents to ascertain any overlap in the claim scope for the double patenting comparison."

Although the Geneva panel states that it needed to refer to the written description of the first patent to determine the extent of overlap between the claims in the two patents, this explanation does not appear to survive close scrutiny. The claims in the first patent broadly recite chemical compound, with absolutely no limitation respecting the use of the compound. It is black letter law that a patent claiming a chemical compound dominates all uses of the compound as defined by the claims, including methods of using the compound that are not disclosed in the patent specification, and methods that were nonobvious and not even contemplated at the time the patent was filed. While it is undoubtedly appropriate to consult the entire specification in construing the scope of a patent claim, it is unnecessary to consult the specification for methods of using a compound when ascertaining the scope of a patent claim directed to the compound as a composition of matter.

Although the Geneva panel’s use of disclosure in the written description as a basis for invalidating the second patent is questionable, at least the panel provided a policy justification for his decision. The panel correctly noted that in order for chemical compound to be patentable, the patent applicant must disclose a utility for the compound. Since the earlier patent only identified a single utility for the claimed drug, the disclosure of that use was necessary for the patentability of the chemical compound. Thus, while it was incorrect for the panel to suggest that the disclosure of the method of use in the written description was relevant to the question of claim scope, it was clearly relevant to the question of patentability.

The Geneva panel stressed that since the earlier patent disclosed only a single utility of the compound, the claims of the second patent reciting nothing more than that disclosed utility as a method was not patentably distinct. In essence, the panel's decision can be rationalized as a policy of not allowing a second patent on a method of use if that method of use was critical to the patentability of the first patent claiming the molecule per se.

Five years later, the Federal Circuit again was faced with an allegation of double patenting involving a first patent claiming a drug active ingredient and a second patent claiming methods of using the drug active ingredient. In Pfizer v. Teva, the panel once again went beyond the language of the patent claims, and invalidated the second patent because the method of use claimed was disclosed in the written description section of the earlier patent.

Significantly, in Pfizer the first patent disclosed multiple uses of the composition, and the invalidated claims encompassed only some subset of those uses. Thus, the facts of Pfizer are distinguishable from those in Geneva, where the method of use claim was directed to the sole utility disclosed in the earlier patent, and thus presumably necessary takedown to the validity of the first patent. Thus the rationale to justify the Geneva decision, i.e., that the claimed method of use was critical to the patentability of the first patent, does not appear to exist in Pfizer. In effect, Pfizer expanded the rule set forth in Geneva, by holding that the disclosure of multiple uses of a molecule in the first patent renders unpatentable later claims directed towards any of those methods.
The Pfizer decision provides no policy justification for this expansion of the Geneva doctrine, and fails to even acknowledge the expansion. Nonetheless, one might justify it on policy grounds by pointing out that by disclosing multiple methods of use in the original patent application, the inventor was able to stake a claim of priority to these multiple uses by securing an early effective filing date. By choosing to avail itself to this earlier effective filing date, the patent applicant (arguably) should be limited to a single term for all of the patents issuing out of this single priority document.

We then come to the Sun v. Lilly decision, in which the panel further expands the holdings in Geneva and Pfizer by interpreting those decisions as creating a bright line rule that any use disclosed in a patent claiming a drug active ingredient precludes the owner of the patent from obtaining any second patent on one of the disclosed method of use, regardless of whether the claimed method of use was disclosed in the original patent application which provides the effective filing date for the first patent. Unlike the earlier cases, the method of use claimed in the second patent was not disclosed in the originally filed application to which the first patent claims priority.

Note that putative policy justifications for the Geneva and Pfizer decisions do not appear to be present in Sun. Unlike Geneva, the second patent does not claim a method of use that was critical to the patentability of the first patent. The first patent disclosed use of the compound as an antiviral agent, and the patent office issued patent claims directed towards use of the compound as an antiviral, raising a presumption that this is a valid practical utility which would confer patentability on the compound, regardless of the later disclosure of the anticancer activity. Furthermore, unlike the case in Pfizer, the later claimed method of use (anticancer) was not disclosed in the originally filed patent application that led to the first patent, so this first patent application was not available to Lilly to provide an effective priority date for the method of treating anticancer.

In fact, Lilly only ran afoul of obviousness type double patenting because it voluntarily chose to update and supplement the disclosure of the first filed patent application with the disclosure of anticancer activity. They could have avoided the problem by simply prosecuting the originally filed patent application to obtain patent claims covering the drug active ingredient, which it seems clear did not require disclosure of the additional material added by amendment to the CIP. If they wanted to expand the genus of chemical compounds, they could have filed the CIP as a divisional, thereby avoiding the need to add disclosure of the anticancer activity to the gemcitabine composition of matter patent.

In short, if Lilly had a crystal ball and could have foreseen the recent expansion of obviousness type patenting, it could have easily avoided obviousness type double patenting by simply altering its patent filing procedure. But this illustrates how the holding in Sun elevates form over substance.

The decision seems to conflict with 35 USC 103(c)

Congress amended the patent statute by introducing 35 USC 103(c), which basically shields companies from having the inventions of a company’s inventors rendered obvious by prior art created by other inventors at the same company. Congress’s intent was to encourage follow-on innovation and intra-company collaboration.

Originally, 103(c) only included 102(f) and 102(g) prior art, but it was subsequently amended to also include 102(e). In effect, Congress explicitly decided that commonly owned inventions should not be subject to invalidation for obviousness based on subject matter disclosed in a commonly assigned earlier filed patent application. Sun stands congressional intent on its head. By ignoring General Foods, it effectively allows the court to invalidate a patent based on a finding that it claims subject matter that is obvious in view of subject matter disclosed in the specification of an earlier filed commonly assigned patent application. But it goes even farther than that, for in Sun invalidity was based on subject matter added after the effective filing date, and thus not available as 102(e) prior art.

The biotech industry would benefit from en banc review of this issue


A number of issues raised by this and decision that would seem to warrant en banc review. There is clearly a tension between General Foods and Sun and its predecessors. While General Foods states that only the patent claims are to be compared, Geneva opened up the door to using the written description of the earlier patent to invalidate a later patent. In Pfizer and Sun, the door has opened wider and wider. The Federal Circuit should acknowledge this expansion of judge made law and consider whether it is justified by public policy considerations. If the court chooses to go down this route, it should delineate the boundaries of the expanded doctrine.

For one thing, it is unfair to patent owners to change the laws of patentability in a manner that invalidates a valuable patent for patent prosecution decisions made based on the case law at the time. In Festo, the Supreme Court stressed the importance of not altering the law in a way that undercuts the investment backed expectations of the inventive community.

Moving forward, some clarity on the issue would be very helpful. Today's inventors should understand the consequences of adding disclosure to a patent application, in order to rationally decide when to file a patent application, what to include in the disclosure, and when to invest in follow-on research.

For example, based on the Sun decision the wisest course for drug companies would be to file their original composition of matter patent application with a minimal disclosure of methods of using the compound sufficient to satisfy the utility requirement. There is an incentive to prioritize follow-on research on uses not disclosed in the original application, because presumably those uses will not be precluded from being patented separately. Companies might be less inclined to pursue research and development of methods of use disclosed in the earlier patent application, but perhaps that is a reason for the court to rethink the course it has embarked upon.

But who is to say for sure that the doctrine will not be expanded in subsequent decisions to cover methods of use that are not even disclosed in the earlier specification? It would certainly be consistent with the progressive expansion we have seen in going from Geneva to Pfizer to Sun. Uncertainty with respect to the availability of patent protection is a disincentive to future investment in innovation, and it would be nice if the en banc Federal Circuit would clarify the boundaries of the obviousness type double patenting doctrine sooner rather than later.

3 comments:

bioinformatics training said...

Yah.... I heard about this The Federal Circuit has established a two-step process for analyzing obviousness type double patenting. First, the court construe the claims in the earlier patent and the claims in the later patent, and determines the differences. Second, it determines whether those differences render the claims patentably distinct.So that I wanted to read that article completely...

biotechnology project training said...

yes i heard about this earlier..and i do agree with this too...nice article thanks for sharing with all...

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