Article 123(2) of the European Patent Convention states, "
A European patent application or a European patent may not be amended in such a way that it contains subject-matter which extends beyond the content of the application as filed". The same rule also applies to UK patents under
section 76 of the Patents Act 1977 (implemented in a "
cack-handed way", according to Jacob LJ
here). The basic rule for both is that no amendments can be validly made which would allow something to be claimed (or even described) that was not clearly also there when the application was filed.
The above issue, among several others, arose recently in the case of
Teva v Merck, a judgment of Mr Justice Floyd from last week and available from BAILII
here. Teva applied for revocation of Merck's EP(UK) patent
0509752, relating to "
Ophthalmic compositions comprising combinations of a carbonic anhydrase inhibitor and a beta-adrenergic antagonist", an eye drop formulation for the treatment of glaucoma. After the usual extensive analysis, Floyd J found that the patent was invalid for being obvious over an earlier scientific article in light of the skilled person's common general knowledge (see PatLit
here for more).
What the IPKat found more interesting, however, was the argument over added matter relating to one of the claims of the patent. The claim as granted covered a method for making the eye drop formulation, and included a final step of "
adjusting the pH of the composition obtained to 5.0-6.0 by the addition of a suitable reagant". This feature was not in the claims as-filed but was added during prosecution, imported from one of 33 examples in the specification, which were whittled down to only 10 in the granted version. Although several of the examples had the step of adjusting pH, none had the range 5-6 together with the composition being claimed. As Floyd J put it, "
Once the claim is limited to the specific co-formulation of dorzolamide and timolol, there is no basis for the disclosure of a process for making a co-formulation by adjusting to a pH other than 5.5 to 6.0" (
para 70).
Merck tried to correct this by further limiting the claim to the range 5.5-6.0, but this range was only specified in another example that related to a composition that did not fit with the rest of the claim, because it had some further features not in the claim. The amendment by itself would therefore amount to "
an impermissible intermediate generalisation" (
para 72). Floyd J found that the claim was invalid for added matter, and the amendment could not be allowed.
The IPKat thinks that this is a good example of a case where everything was thrown in to the application at the outset (33 examples seems like a lot), but where not enough thought went into ways in which the different examples could be linked together. In this case, putting in claims to different pH ranges probably would not have saved the patent from being invalid for other reasons. It could however have easily been more important, given the very small differences that often make all the difference, particularly in pharma patents.
For students this a sound case to make sure you understand added subject matter and the dreaded intermediate generalisation.
ReplyDeleteI found the case most interesting for the way that *Obvious to Try* has been ressurected. IMHO that was not what Jacob intended - surely its just is the invention obvious without these embellshments. When I read the decision I was wondering which way he would go. Any news of whether there is an appeal.
I think it is probably a good example of where everything was thrown into a case at the last minute! Many corporate patent attorneys (and others), I am sure, have had the experience of filing a case at very short notice, where the niceties of carefully thought through intermediate generalizations are but a pipe-dream.
ReplyDeleteIs this the first successful operation of an obviousness/sufficiency squeeze since Conor v Angiotech? Some commentators had taken the view that such squeezes would become less frequent following Conor.
ReplyDeleteParts of the judge’s analysis of Conor are hard to follow and may not be quite right: see ¶94 where he states that “a claim to a product which does a particular job may be valid, despite the fact that it may be obvious to make exactly such a product to find out if it does the job”. At ¶95 the judge unsurprisingly expresses his discomfort with that analysis.
I'm struck by how something (Ganda) was found to be common general knowledge, despite both experts on one side having never heard of it.
ReplyDeleteAny other cases like this?
Check out para 28 of the Decision. To the surprise of the judge, Dr Sugrue declined to express a view. Thereafter, the court approached his expert evidence "with a degree of caution". Ah, the power of cross-examination. Say too much and you've blown it. Say too little and you blow it just as comprehensively. When litigating a patent in Europe, where else can you observe this method of rooting out the facts?
ReplyDelete