Application of Julius Diamond and Milton Kellman

360 F.2d 214, 53 C.C.P.A. 1172
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 12, 1966
DocketPatent Appeal 7501
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 360 F.2d 214 (Application of Julius Diamond and Milton Kellman) 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 Julius Diamond and Milton Kellman, 360 F.2d 214, 53 C.C.P.A. 1172 (ccpa 1966).

Opinion

MARTIN, Judge.

This is an appeal from a decision of the Board of Appeals affirming the rejection of all the claims in appellants’ application 1 as obvious in view of certain prior art within the meaning of 35 U.S.C. § 103.

Section 103 requires us to determine whether or not the differences between the subject matter sought to be patented and the prior art are such that the subject matter as a whole was obvious. The parties have come to issue on the question of whether evidence relating to a therapeutic composition shows that the composition exhibits such unexpected results, in terms of an unexpected synergism, as to be non-obvious. Appellants do not rely on their evidence, submitted in “Case Reports” that are discussed in detail below, as showing unexpected results in qualitative statements of the patients as to the efficacy of the therapeutic composition. Rather, appellants posit their case on increased potency evidenced by quantitative reductions in dosage; that, they contend, is a synergism probative of non-obviousness. We think that appellants would be entitled to prevail should they show such synergism to be unexpected. However, we conclude, upon a review of the record, that there is insufficient proof of synergism in the dosage itself, and a fortiori, appellants have not proved it unexpected. We shall first consider the invention before considering the evidence.

*215 As stated in appellants’ specification:

This invention relates to therapeutic compositions and preparations which contain in admixture or in intimate association, a water soluble form of adenosine-5-monophosphate [A5MP] and a glucocorticoid of the group comprising prednisolone and hydrocorti-sone, and functional derivatives thereof. More specifically, the invention relates to such therapeutic compositions which may be in the form suitable for oral administration or for parenteral use. These compositions and preparations have utility in the treatment of bursitis, tendinitis, myositis, acute arthritis, neuritis and related conditions.

All of the appealed claims define compositions and recite the two ingredients, A5MP and glucocorticoid. Claims 1 through 8 define the composition broadly as a combination of the two ingredients, claims 9 through 11 recite the combination in the form of a layered tablet, the ingredients being in different layers, and claims 12 through 14 recite the combination in a gelatin vehicle. 2 *****8

The references relied on for the rejection of the claims are:

Feinberg et al., Methylprednisolone (Medrol), A Potent New Anti-Inflammatory Steroid, 165 J.A.M.A. 1560 (1957)
“Adenosine-5-Monophosphate,” U.S. Dispensatory 1526 (25th Ed., 1955)
“Medrol,” Annals of Internal Medicine 38, (Oct. 1957) (Advertisement)
“Co-Hydeltra,” J. Allergy 29 (July 1956) (Advertisement) 19 J.A.Ph.A. (Pract.Pharm.Ed.) 15 (Jan. 1958) (Advertisement)
“Adenolin,” Physicians’ Desk Reference 699 (12th Ed., 1958)
Solimán, Combination Therapy, A Manual of Pharmacology, 38 (8th Ed. 1957)
Drill, Pharmacology in Medicine, 73/12 Table 73/3 (1954)
Goodman et al., Drug Combination, Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics, 11 (2d Ed. 1955)

We find it unnecessary to discuss several of these references in detail since they show no more than what is acknowledged in appellants’ specification:

While adenosine-5-monophosphate and glucocorticoids such as predniso-lone and hydrocortisone, and their functional derivatives, have known utility in the treatment of disorders such as bursitis, so far as is known these two different active therapeutic agents have not been used in combination for treatment of such disorders or for any other purpose.

Thus, the U. S. Dispensatory publication, the “Medrol” ad, the Feinberg et al. article, the “Co-Hydeltra” ad, and the cited portion of the Physicians’ Desk Reference all show adenosine-5-monophosphate (A5MP) or the glucocorticoid (steroid) component separately useful in treating collagen diseases. The “Co-Hydeltra” ad and the J.A.Ph.A. ad show layered pills; appellants do not predicate patentability on the layered pill form of the composition and thus no separate issue is presented thereby.

*216 The examiner’s position, particularly with respect to the Goodman et al. (Goodman) and Solimán references, was summarized fairly by the board (footnote by the court):

The Examiner’s position is that the combination of two drugs, each shown to be old by the prior art for use in treating inflammatory diseases, is obvious * * *. 3 The Examiner has cited the Goodman * * * reference which teaches generally that when drugs having the same type of action are given in combination, the average dose of each should be reduced. The reference further states that in this manner toxic effects of large dosages of the individual components may be avoided and that combinations of drugs which produce the same end results but through different mechanisms of action, may thus give a combined effective action.
The Solimán reference was cited to show that a desirable synergistic action may result from use of a combination of drugs wherein undesired side effects are not increased or are neutralized and enabling [sic] the corresponding dosage of each to be reduced.

The Drill reference teaches that there are three types of ACTH 4 in general use, one of which is a “long-acting, lyophilized ACTH in a gelatin menstruum for subcutaneous or intramuscular injection,” and that the ACTH dosage in the form of a “long-acting gel” may be less than other forms for comparable effectiveness. 5

Appellants’ position, basically, is twofold. First, the combination of the two drugs is non-obvious since there is no teaching to combine these two out of all the known anti-inflammatory agents. 6 Second, and this is appellants’ major position, the resultant combination product has greater potency or effectiveness than that expected on the basis of independent action of each component, i. e., the result is in appellants’ terms “synergistic” which we read to mean that the results show unexpected synergism. 7

*217 Concerning appellants’ first position, we think it clear that it is a standard practice in this art to combine ingredients. Both the Goodman and Solimán references discuss in some detail the combination of drugs. The relevant part of Goodman states:

7. Drug Combinations.

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360 F.2d 214, 53 C.C.P.A. 1172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-julius-diamond-and-milton-kellman-ccpa-1966.