Over the last seven years there has been commotion in Obviousness-type Double Patenting (“ODP”) practice. One of the latest cases to spur a considerable amount of interest is Mitsubishi Tanabe Corp. v. Sandoz, Inc., which is currently on appeal to the Federal Circuit (“CAFC”). While a detailed review of this case is not the intent of this post, as a fair number of practitioners have provided insightful coverage, an historical overview is helpful for framing the decision and issues that need clarification from the CAFC.

The upheaval in ODP jurisprudence began with Gilead Sciences, Inc. v. Natco Pharma Ltd. (2014). Reversing the district court, the CAFC found that a later-issued but earlier-expiring patent could serve as an ODP reference. The court discussed in detail the policy concerns behind the judicially-created ODP doctrine, namely preventing extension of a patent monopoly based on later expiring patents on obvious variations of the same invention. The panel held that the relevant inquiry for an ODP analysis is the expiration dates of the patents at issue, a shift from the practice of looking at the issue date. Following Gilead, the CAFC has continued to refine the updated ODP architecture, including what can be considered an ODP reference.

In Abbvie Inc. v. Mathilda and Terence Kennedy Institute of Rheumatology Trust (2014) the CAFC made Gilead explicit: ODP “appl[ies] where two patents . . . claim the same invention [and] have different expiration dates.” In rejecting the patent owner’s arguments that ODP does not apply after the Uruguay Round Agreements Act (“URAA”) the court noted, in dicta, that “[p]atents claiming overlapping subject matter that were filed at the same time still can have different patent terms due to examination delays at the PTO.”

In Novartis Pharma. Corp. v. Breckenridge Pharma. Inc. (2018) (“Novartis I”) the CAFC reversed the district court and held that ODP did not apply when there was no evidence of “gamesmanship” and the difference in patent expiration dates was a result of an intervening change of law. There, the defendant argued that a post-URAA patent that had expired on Sept. 23, 2013 invalidated a pre-URAA patent with an expected expiration of Sept. 9, 2019. The original expiration date of the pre-URAA patent was Sept. 9, 2014, but an additional 5-years of Patent Term Extension (“PTE”) was awarded for regulatory delay.

In Novartis AG v. Ezra Ventures LLC (2018) (“Novartis II”), a case critical to the Mitsubishi decision, the defendant argued that a post-URAA patent that had expired on Sept. 23, 2017 invalidated a pre-URAA expiring Feb. 18, 2019. The original expiration date of the pre-URAA patent was Feb. 18, 2014, but an additional 5-years of PTE was awarded for regulatory delay (like the Novartis I pre-URAA patent). The defendant also argued that the PTE awarded to the pre-URAA patent should be truncated to have expired at the same time as the post-URAA patent.

The CAFC affirmed the district court’s judgment, holding that the post-URAA patent was not a proper ODP reference. Further, the CAFC extended its holding in Merck & Co., Inc. v. Hi-Tech Pharmacal Co., Inc. (2007) and held that “PTE . . . is valid if the extended patent is otherwise valid without the extension.” The CAFC noted that there was no evidence of trying to orchestrate longer patent monopolies and the policy concerns at the heart of ODP were not present. Underlying to the Mitsubishi decision, the CAFC refused to use a judge-made doctrine to limit a statutorily grounded PTE.

In Mitsubishi the two patents of concern were both post-URAA patents, shared a common priority chain, and were originally expected to expire on the same date (July 30, 2024). However, one patent had received 256 days PTE while the other received 1079 days of Patent Term Adjustment (“PTA”). The defendant argued that the patent benefiting from PTA was invalid based on ODP in view of the earlier expiring, PTE-extended patent. Relying on Novartis I and II, the district court found that the earlier expiring, PTE-extended patent was not a proper ODP reference—the traditional ODP policy concerns were not present and the term extension was based in statute. The court dismissed the statements in Abbvie regarding examination delays at the PTO as dicta and discounted the defendant’s attempt to distinguish PTA and PTE in footnotes.

Many practitioners are looking forward to the CAFC’s decision in the case. Given the uncertainties surrounding ODP, clarification from the CAFC would be a welcome development.

To what extent is it proper to analogize between cases that involve PTE with cases that involve PTA?

In Mitsubishi, the district court analogized to Novartis II (a PTE case) to reach its conclusion. However, in Merck (mentioned above in relation to Abbvie) the CAFC contrasted §§ 154 and 156 while construing the later. The district court discounted the incongruence by distinguishing Merck as involving terminal disclaimers, which were not at issue.

Another consideration here is that the scopes of impact for PTE and PTA are very different. Any patent—covering any technology—that experiences delay during prosecution may qualify for day-for-day PTA; only one patent covering a product subject to regulatory review may receive PTE. Thus, a blanket exclusion of patents that differ only in PTA as ODP references will have much farther reaching consequences than for PTE.

What is the impact on other statutory provisions?

The Mitsubishi court did not engage in an in depth statutory construction reaching its conclusion and interplay between other sections need to be considered to best effectuate the Act. One area of potential impact is the § 121 safe harbor. Essentially, under the § 121 safe harbor patents that issue following proper restriction practice (i.e., divisional applications) cannot be used as references against one another. In Mitsubishi a continuation application was found uncitable against a related application.

The interplay between the network of statutory provisions and judge-made doctrine is nuanced and can change over time. In the end there is a need to find the right balance and the CAFC should provide very much appreciated clarification and guidance shortly.

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Photo of Nicholas C. Prairie Nicholas C. Prairie

Nicholas Prairie is an associate in the Litigation Department, and a member of the Life Sciences Patent practice. He works with life science and pharmaceutical clients of all sizes in the preparation and prosecution of patent applications.

Prior to joining Proskauer, Nicholas was…

Nicholas Prairie is an associate in the Litigation Department, and a member of the Life Sciences Patent practice. He works with life science and pharmaceutical clients of all sizes in the preparation and prosecution of patent applications.

Prior to joining Proskauer, Nicholas was an associate at another Boston firm, where he worked with corporate clients of all sizes. He drafted and prosecuted U.S. and foreign patent applications, and assisted in district court litigation and Inter Parte Reviews. Nicholas’s technical expertise includes small molecules, peptides, and protein conjugates.

Before law school, he worked as a chemist at Ipsen (Biomeasure, Milford, MA) where he synthesized a variety of pharmaceutically interesting compounds including; small molecules, peptides, peptide-drug conjugates, proteins, and protein-polymer conjugates. As a graduate student his research focused on natural product synthesis.

Photo of Fangli Chen Fangli Chen

Dr. Fangli Chen is a partner in the Litigation Department and chair of the Life Sciences Patent Practice. She represents all types of companies in the biotech and pharmaceutical industries, and has deep scientific expertise and a strong business sense. Fangli effectively identifies…

Dr. Fangli Chen is a partner in the Litigation Department and chair of the Life Sciences Patent Practice. She represents all types of companies in the biotech and pharmaceutical industries, and has deep scientific expertise and a strong business sense. Fangli effectively identifies and transforms technological developments into valuable intellectual property assets for her clients and specializes in the strategic development of complex IP portfolios for companies that align with their business goals.

Fangli’s practice also focuses on post-grant review before the USPTO, oppositions, pre-litigation and litigation strategy, due diligence investigations, freedom-to-operate, non-infringement and invalidity analysis, licensing and other IP matters in connection with commercial transactions. She handles a variety of technology areas including biochemistry, molecular and cell biology, immunotherapy, enzyme replacement therapy, nucleic acid based technologies including messenger RNA therapy, gene therapy, gene editing, antisense and oligonucleotides based therapies, vaccines, bioinformatics, and small molecule compound drugs.

Fangli also has a wealth of experience in the following areas:

  • Post-grant challenges: representing clients in inter partes review interference and various foreign opposition proceedings.
  • Technology transactions & licensing: advising clients on matters relating to technology or material transfer, licensing and research collaborations.
  • Investment or acquisition counsel: assisting investors in assessing the technology and intellectual property assets and risks for potential target investments and counseling companies on intellectual property matters in connection with public offering or acquisition.

Fangli has been repeatedly noted for her top-tier work by industry publications, including being listed as a World’s Leading Patent Practitioner by IAM Patent 1000 and recognized as one of the Top 250 Women in IP nationwide by Managing Intellectual Property. In 2019, she was named Patent Strategy & Management Attorney of the Year in Massachusetts by LMG Life Sciences. She has also been recognized by Best Lawyers in AmericaClient Choice, Legal 500Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly and Massachusetts Super Lawyers. Prior to joining Proskauer, Fangli was a partner at a leading Boston law firm.