Medinol Ltd. v. Guidant Corp.

412 F. Supp. 2d 301, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 35866, 2005 WL 3535062
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedDecember 27, 2005
Docket03 Civ. 2604(SAS)
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 412 F. Supp. 2d 301 (Medinol Ltd. v. Guidant Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Medinol Ltd. v. Guidant Corp., 412 F. Supp. 2d 301, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 35866, 2005 WL 3535062 (S.D.N.Y. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

SCHEINDLIN, District Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION

Medinol Ltd. (“Medinol”) brings this action for damages and declaratory and permanent injunctive relief relating to the alleged infringement by Guidant Corp. and its subsidiary Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. (“ACS”) (collectively “Guidant”) of certain of Medinol’s patents. 1 This Opinion resolves Guidant’s motion for summary judgment on the issue of invalidity, which asserts that all claims of the patents-in-suit are obvious as a matter of law. 2 For the following reasons, Guidant’s motion for summary judgment on invalidity is denied.

II. BACKGROUND

Two previous Opinions have been issued in this case. One granted in part and denied in part Guidant’s motion for summary judgment based on collateral estoppel. 3 The other construed several terms necessary to evaluate the claims in this case. 4 Familiarity with both Opinions is assumed.

A. The Parties

Medinol, which has its principal place of business in Tel Aviv, Israel, designs and manufactures coronary stents. 5 The company was founded by, among others, Dr. Jacob (“Kobi”) Richter, who currently serves as Medinol’s Chairman of the Board and Chief Technical Officer. 6 Guidant develops, markets, and sells cardiovascular medical products and has its principal place of business in Indiana. ACS has its principal place of business in California. 7

B. The Technology

The devices at issue in this litigation are directed toward opening diseased coronary arteries 8 and maintaining blood flow to and *305 from the heart. 9 In the 1970’s, the preferred treatment for coronary artery disease was “balloon angioplasty,” also known as “percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty”, or PTCA. 10 This procedure involves first inserting a balloon into the diseased artery via a catheter, then inflating the balloon to push open the artery. 11 The goal is for the artery to stay open once the balloon is removed. However, in about thirty-five percent of such procedures, the effects were temporary and the artery eventually re-closed, or “recoiled.” 12

Stents provide a more permanent solution. A stent is a “medical device much like [ ] miniature scaffolding that physically holds open a diseased artery into which [it is] inserted.” 13 Stents are used to treat diseased arteries in the heart (i.e. coronary arteries), as well as “peripheral arteries” located in other areas of the body. 14 Stents are introduced into the blood vessel on a balloon catheter, in a procedure during which the catheter is maneuvered into the blocked artery, where the balloon is inflated, causing the stent to expand against the vessel wall. Once the balloon has been deflated and removed, the stent remains in place indefinitely, holding the blood vessel open and thereby improving blood flow. 15

The modern stent originated in the 1980s. In April 1988, a patent was issued to Julio Palmaz (Palmaz ’762 Patent) for an “expandable intraluminal graft, and method and apparatus for implanting an expandable intraluminal graft,” i.e., a “stent,” which Johnson & Johnson commercialized in 1991. The Palmaz ’762 Patent described the first stent to “include a plurality of closed cells” that, upon expansion, “transformed [from slot-shaped cells] into diamond-shaped cells, resulting in an expanded stent with a honeycomb appearance.” 16

At approximately the same time, Palmaz patented another stent (Palmaz ’417 Patent) “combining slot-shaped cells with flexible connectors to increase longitudinal flexibility.” 17 Other designs used “coil connectors” to impart great flexibility, but at the expense of radial strength once the stent is expanded or deployed. 18 In 1995, Richard Schatz developed a new variation *306 of the Palmaz stent, involving “straight flexible connectors between tube sections” (Palmaz/Schatz ’984 Patent). 19

C. Prior Stent Designs

Three prior stent designs are particularly important to resolution of this motion. First, in the early 1990s, Guidant developed a stent design based on connecting single serpentine rings with flexible straight connectors, for which it obtained the Lau ’955 Patent. 20 Second, in 1994, a team of engineers filed, and then abandoned, a patent application for a “hybrid stent” that attempted to combine flexibility and radial strength (“the Burmeister Application”). 21 Third, in 1999, the Fischell ’370 Patent was issued, disclosing a stent using rings that become circular when fully expanded, connected with either straight or “undulating” (looped) longitudinals. 22

1. Lau

The Lau ’955 Patent asserts that “[w]hat has been needed and heretofore unavailable is a stent which has a high degree of flexibility so that it can be advanced through tortuous passageways and can be readily expanded and yet have the mechanical strength to hold open the body lumen into which it is expanded. The present invention satisfies this need.” 23 Lau’s invention was summarized as “an expandable stent which is relatively flexible along its longitudinal axis to facilitate delivery through tortuous body lumens, but which is stiff and stable enough radially in an expanded condition to maintain the patency of a body lumen such as an artery when implanted therein.” 24

The Lau ’955 Patent discloses an invention comprising serpentine rings, connected with straight “connectors,” or links between rings. 25 The rings may be connected in two ways: out-of-phase (connecting adjacent crowns of rings that face each other) and in-phase (crowns pointing in one direction). 26

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Bluebook (online)
412 F. Supp. 2d 301, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 35866, 2005 WL 3535062, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/medinol-ltd-v-guidant-corp-nysd-2005.