Application of Jack K. Dale

377 F.2d 661, 54 C.C.P.A. 1402
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 25, 1967
DocketPatent Appeal 7726
StatusPublished

This text of 377 F.2d 661 (Application of Jack K. Dale) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Customs and Patent Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Application of Jack K. Dale, 377 F.2d 661, 54 C.C.P.A. 1402 (ccpa 1967).

Opinion

SMITH, Judge.

The issue to be decided concerning the rejection of appealed claims 1, 2, 16, and 17, is stated in the solicitor’s brief as follows:

The issue to be decided in this case is whether the differences between the compositions sought to be patented and the prior art are such that the compositions as a whole would have been obvious at the time the invention was made to a person having ordinary skill in the art to which said compositions pertain, 35 U.S.C. 103.

The invention in issue is disclosed 1 as a therapeutic composition containing hydrocortisone and neomycin as active ingredients. The four claims on appeal, relating generally to a therapeutic composition, appear to stand or fall together. They are:

1. A therapeutic composition comprising hydrocortisone free alcohol and neomycin.
2. A topical therapeutic composition comprising hydrocortisone free alcohol and neomycin dispersed in a vehicle suitable for topical application.
16. A therapeutic composition comprising hydrocortisone free alcohol and neomycin sulfate.
17. A therapeutic composition comprising sodium hydrocortisone hemisuccinate and neomycin sulfate.

The Rejection

The disclosures relied upon to support the rejection are found in the following references:

Reichstein 2,183,589 Dec. 19, 1939 1 Lepri, “Studies on Cortisone in Ophthalmology”, 35 Am.J.Ophthalmology 935-946 (1952);
Modern Drugs 293 (Jan. 1953); Boland, “Hydrocortisone,” 13 J.Am. Ph.Assn. 540-544 (1952);
Gordon, “Status of Corticotropin, Cortisone and Hydrocortisone * * *,r Brit.J.Opthalmology 85-98 (Feb. 1953);
Merck, “Cortone and Hydrocortone”, (Apr. 1953).

The composition covered by the claims; contains two active ingredients: 1) “hydrocortisone free alcohol” or “sodium hydrocortisone hemisuccinate,” and 2) neomycin. Appellant’s specification points out that the word “hydrocortisone” is *662 used to mean 17 a-hydroxycortieosterone and its therapeutically active derivatives, such as the 21-esters including the acetate, the cyclopentylproprionate and others, and the 9 a-halo derivatives, especially 9 a-fluorohydroeortisone and 9 a-chlorohydrocortisone, and the therapeutically active derivatives, e. g., esters, thereof. It also includes the water soluble derivatives of these compounds, such as the hemisuccinates, e. g., sodium hydrocortisone hemisuccinate.

The word “neomycin” is also disclosed as meaning the antibiotic more fully described in Waksman, Neomycin (Rutgers University Press, 1953). It includes the various forms of neomycin (such as the B and C forms) aftd their therapeutically active derivatives (such as the sulfate and hydrochloride salts).

The composition claimed is prepared by mixing the two active ingredients. Generally the mixture is prepared in a vehicle suitable for the particular use to which the composition is to be put. When the composition is to be used topically it is generally prepared in an ointment base. It can also be prepared as a lotion or jelly for topical use. It is generally prepared in a sterile vehicle when the use intended is ophthalmic or requires parenteral injection. It is prepared in an aerosol type vehicle when intended for use as a nasal spray. It can be prepared in the form of a powder or tablet for vaginal and similar uses.

The solicitor’s position, as stated in his brief, is that the prior art references are pertinent to the issue as follows:

(1) The Reichstein et al. patent * * * disclosed suparenal cortical hormones containing at least one group which is convertible to a hydroxyl group and cortisone actetate (claims 7 and 16 * * *). Example 6 of the reference refers to the preparation of cortisone hemisuccinate * * *. Appellant agrees that Reichstein suggests the hemisuccinate of hydrocortisone * *
(2) The Lepri article discloses an in vitro study to determine whether cortisone (cortisone acetate was actually utilized) interferes with the action of such antibiotics as neomycin, penicillin, terramycin, and three other antibiotics * * *. The conclusion from the in vitro study was that “cortisone does not have any influence on the action of antibiotics on microorganisms” * * *. An in vivo study was performed to confirm this conclusion * * *. Experiments were performed to find out whether cortisone had any effect on the antibacterial efficacy of the antibiotic penicillin and terramycin * * *. The results of the experiments led to the conclusion that * *:
“The simultaneous administration of cortisone with penicillin and terramycin, which by themselves possess a considerable antibacterial activity in the experimental infection of the rabbit, seems to exert a favorable influence on the course of the infection by shortening its duration and causing an attenuation of the inflammatory signs.”
Lepri finally concluded from his studies that * * *:
“The combined cortisone-antibiotic treatment, on the one hand, reduces considerably the symptoms due to the allergic exudative component of the infection and, on the other hand, acts directly on the infecting agent. This, theoretically at least, seems to be the therapy of preference for the infections of the anterior segment of the eye.”
(3) The article by Boland * * * reports the effects of hydrocortisone given orally to patients with rheumatoid arthritis * * *. The free alcohol of hydrocortisone was found to have an antirheumatic potency “milligram for milligram, at least 50 per cent greater than that of cortisone acetate * * *. Also, the free alcohol was found to be “approximately twice as effective” as hydrocortisone acetate
* * *
(4) The “Neosone” advertisement * * * is directed to an ophthalmic ointment containing “cortisone for in *663 flammation” and “neomycin for infection.” The active ingredients are listed as cortisone acetate and neomycin sulfate. [Published in “Modern Drugs.”]
(5) The Gordon article * * * discloses that hydrocortisone has been employed in a series' of sixty cases “much in the same manner and in the same dosages as cortisone” * * *. The results with hydrocortisone are reported to be * * *:
“Systemically it appears to be more effective than cortisone in lesser concentrations (Alpert, 1952). Topically, its analgesic effect is the same or greater than that of cortisone. Administered subcon junetivally, it provokes less local reaction than cortisone.”

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377 F.2d 661, 54 C.C.P.A. 1402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-jack-k-dale-ccpa-1967.