Stryker European Operations Holdings LLC v. Osteomed LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedAugust 7, 2025
Docket23-2397
StatusUnpublished

This text of Stryker European Operations Holdings LLC v. Osteomed LLC (Stryker European Operations Holdings LLC v. Osteomed LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stryker European Operations Holdings LLC v. Osteomed LLC, (Fed. Cir. 2025).

Opinion

Case: 23-2397 Document: 54 Page: 1 Filed: 08/07/2025

NOTE: This disposition is nonprecedential.

United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ______________________

STRYKER EUROPEAN OPERATIONS HOLDINGS LLC, Appellant

v.

OSTEOMED LLC, Appellee ______________________

2023-2397, 2023-2398 ______________________

Appeals from the United States Patent and Trademark Office, Patent Trial and Appeal Board in Nos. IPR2022- 00487, IPR2022-00488. ______________________

Decided: August 7, 2025 ______________________

SHARON HWANG, McAndrews, Held & Malloy, Ltd., Chi- cago, IL, argued for appellant. Also represented by SCOTT P. MCBRIDE, SEAN SPARROW, I, ROBERT ANTHONY SURRETTE.

DEVON C. BEANE, K&L Gates LLP, Chicago, IL, argued for appellee. Also represented by JASON ALEXANDER ENGEL. ______________________ Case: 23-2397 Document: 54 Page: 2 Filed: 08/07/2025

Before HUGHES, BRYSON, and STARK, Circuit Judges. STARK, Circuit Judge. Patent owner Stryker European Operations Holdings LLC (“Stryker”) appeals from two final written decisions (“FWD”) of the Patent Trial and Appeal Board (“Board”). The Board held that several claims of two of Stryker’s pa- tents, which are directed to surgical devices used to fix bone fractures and fuse joints, are unpatentable as obvious. We affirm. I Stryker owns U.S. Patent Nos. 9,078,713 (the “’713 pa- tent”) and 10,993,751 (the “’751 patent”) (together, the “Challenged Patents”). The Challenged Patents are di- rected to bone plates used for arthrodesis, which is the sur- gical fusing of two or more bones over a joint, and osteosynthesis, which is the surgical fusing of two or more bone fragments together to form a single mechanically sta- bilized bone. ’751 patent 1:27-35; see also id. 3:7-36 (inde- pendent claim 1 describing system for arthrodesis); id. 3:61-4:29 (independent claim 11 describing system for osteosynthesis). The plates are designed to fuse bones in the human foot across one of several joints, including the metatarsophalangeal joint in the big toe. ’751 patent 3:37- 46 (dependent claims 2-6 specifying use across multiple joints in human foot). The ’751 patent is a great-grandchild of the application that issued as the ’713 patent. Due to body weight, muscle pull, or both, bones are ec- centrically loaded, meaning that one side of a bone is in compression while the other is in tension. On the compres- sion side, the longitudinal forces along the bone point to- wards its center, while on the tension side these forces point outward from the center towards the terminal ends of the bone. The placement of a plate on the tension (as opposed to compression) side of a bone is critical because Case: 23-2397 Document: 54 Page: 3 Filed: 08/07/2025

STRYKER EUROPEAN OPERATIONS HOLDINGS LLC v. 3 OSTEOMED LLC

this orientation prevents the tension side from opening up, leading to separation of the bones or bone fragments, which would impede fusion and bone growth (“osteogenesis”). But placement at the tension side is not always practicable. For example, the bones in the hands and feet are in tension at the bottom side, where a plate would cause several is- sues, including discomfort and pain. J.A. 2172-73 ¶ 30 (Declaration of Dr. George B. Holmes, Jr., M.D.). In addi- tion, the bones on the top of the foot are covered with only a thin layer of subcutaneous tissue and skin, so any bone plate designed for use in that location must have a low pro- file. Id. The Challenged Patents address these problems by uti- lizing a plate fixed at the top of the foot in joint fusion pro- cedures, thereby transferring the tensile load from the bottom of the foot onto the plate, preventing spatial sepa- ration of the target bones or bone fragments. ’713 patent 1:47-49, 2:16-32. Like many surgical devices, those dis- closed in Stryker’s patents contain a screw that passes through two or more bones (or bone fragments), placing them in compression using the “lag effect,” which is created when the screw head presses against the first bone (or frag- ment) while the threads engage with the second bone, pull- ing the two together in space, stabilizing the structure, and facilitating osteogenesis. See id. 3:4-17, 4:13-23, 5:11-19, see also ’751 patent 3:28-36, 3:47-50, 4:18-29. Independent claim 32 of the ’713 patent is reproduced below: A method of fusing a joint, the method comprising: spanning first and second bones separated by a joint with a bone plate, such that a first hole of the bone plate is aligned with a first bone of the joint and a second hole of the bone plate is aligned with a second bone of the joint; Case: 23-2397 Document: 54 Page: 4 Filed: 08/07/2025

inserting a first fixation member through the first hole of the plate and into the first bone of the joint; inserting a second fixation member through the second hole of the plate and into the second bone of the joint; and inserting a third fixation member through a third hole in the plate, into the first bone, across the joint, and into the second bone so that a free end of the third fixation member, not attached to any por- tion of the plate, resides in the second bone and a head of the third fixation member is seated in the third hole, the third hole being angled relative to a longitudinal axis of the plate through a thickness of the plate, wherein the third fixation member is the only fixation member extending across the joint. ’713 patent 5:1-19. An embodiment of a plate used in the method of this claim is depicted in Figure 2, shown below. The method uses “a bone plate” alongside “fixation members,” e.g., screws and pins, for fusion. ’713 patent 5:1-5, 6:20-22. The bone plate contains a first hole “aligned with a first bone of the joint” and a second hole “aligned with the second bone of the joint.” ’713 patent 5:2-5. One screw is inserted in each of these holes, largely perpendicular to the plate. Case: 23-2397 Document: 54 Page: 5 Filed: 08/07/2025

STRYKER EUROPEAN OPERATIONS HOLDINGS LLC v. 5 OSTEOMED LLC

A third screw is placed through a third hole [marked 1a1 in Figure 2] and then further inserted “into the first bone, across the joint, and into the second bone.” ’713 patent 5:11-13. “[T]he third hole must be angled relative to a lon- gitudinal axis of the plate through a thickness of the plate,” allowing it to transgress both bones and the joint. ’713 pa- tent 5:11-19. In both Challenged Patents, “temporary fixation members” are used in addition to the three screws to help stabilize the device and factilitate proper placement of the plate during surgery. ’713 patent 6:16-18; ’751 patent 4:9- 11, 4:28-29. The ’751 patent also specifies, in each of its independent claims, that the third hole is “located be- tween” the first hole and the second hole. ’751 patent 3:19- 20 (claim 1), 4:3-4 (claim 11), 4:54-55 (claim 17). Petitioner-Appellee OsteoMed, Inc. (“OsteoMed”) filed two petitions for inter partes reviews (“IPRs”), both of which were instituted. In its first petition (IPR 2022-487), OsteoMed contended independent claim 32 and dependent claims 33-39 of the ’713 patent were unpatentable as obvi- ous based on five grounds. The Board found all of the chal- lenged claims obvious over the prior art asserted by OsteoMed. J.A. 42-44, 46. In a second petition (IPR 2022-488), OsteoMed chal- lenged independent claims 1, 11, and 17 of the ’751 patent and claims depending from these. The Board found claims 1-3 and 6-18 obvious over the same prior art asserted by OsteoMed. J.A. 95, 98. Four prior art references are pertinent to this appeal. Arnould (EP Pat. 1897509) discloses a plate to fuse the metatarsophalangeal joint in the big toe. In Arnould, a screw passes through both bones of the joint and is inserted into a hole that sits in a leg or “tab” (20) extending from the plate and wraps around the side of the phalanx bone. J.A. 1149 (Arnould Fig. 1, reproduced below).

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Stryker European Operations Holdings LLC v. Osteomed LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stryker-european-operations-holdings-llc-v-osteomed-llc-cafc-2025.