Tris Pharma, Inc. v. Actavis Laboratories Fl, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedNovember 20, 2018
Docket17-2557
StatusUnpublished

This text of Tris Pharma, Inc. v. Actavis Laboratories Fl, Inc. (Tris Pharma, Inc. v. Actavis Laboratories Fl, Inc.) 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
Tris Pharma, Inc. v. Actavis Laboratories Fl, Inc., (Fed. Cir. 2018).

Opinion

NOTE: This disposition is nonprecedential.

United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ______________________

TRIS PHARMA, INC., Plaintiff-Appellant

v.

ACTAVIS LABORATORIES FL, INC., Defendant-Appellee ______________________

2017-2557, 2017-2559, 2017-2560 ______________________

Appeals from the United States District Court for the District of Delaware in Nos. 1:14-cv-01309-GMS, 1:15-cv- 00393-GMS, 1:15-cv-00969-GMS, Judge Gregory M. Sleet. ______________________

Decided: November 20, 2018 ______________________

ERROL TAYLOR, Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy, LLP, New York, NY, argued for plaintiff-appellant. Also represented by ANNA BROOK, JORDAN P. MARKHAM, FREDERICK ZULLOW.

WILLIAM M. JAY, Goodwin Procter LLP, Washington, DC, argued for defendant-appellee. Also represented by BRIAN TIMOTHY BURGESS, WILLIAM G. JAMES, II; DAVID ZIMMER, Boston, MA; ELIZABETH HOLLAND, LINNEA P. CIPRIANO, MICHAEL B. COTTLER, CYNTHIA LAMBERT 2 TRIS PHARMA, INC. v. ACTAVIS LABORATORIES FL, INC.

HARDMAN, TIFFANY MAHMOOD, ALEXANDRA D. VALENTI, New York, NY. ______________________

Before NEWMAN, O’MALLEY, and CHEN, Circuit Judges. CHEN, Circuit Judge. Tris Pharma, Inc. (Tris) holds the approved New Drug Application for Quillivant XR®, an extended release methylphenidate (MPH) formulation for the treatment of Attention Deficit Hyperactive Disorder (ADHD). When Actavis Laboratories, Inc. (Actavis) submitted an Abbre- viated New Drug Application (ANDA) to the U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA) seeking approval to market generic versions of Quillivant XR®, Tris sued Actavis for infringement of U.S. Patent Nos. 8,465,765 (’765 patent), 8,563,033 (’033 patent), 8,778,390 (’390 patent), 8,956,649 (’649 patent), and 9,040,083 (’083 patent). After a five-day bench trial, the district court found all asserted claims of the patents-in-suit invalid under 35 U.S.C. § 103. Tris appealed. Because the district court’s conclusions of law are based on inadequate fact-findings, we vacate and remand. BACKGROUND MPH is one of the most widely prescribed psychost- imulants and has been used to treat ADHD since the mid- 1950s. Early formulations of MPH were immediate release (IR) forms of the drug that exhibited clinical benefits within 20 to 60 minutes after dosing and whose effects lasted 2–4 hours. IR forms of MPH, however, had drawbacks because they had to be administered multiple times a day, making it challenging for patients to adhere to the dosing schedule. Sustained release (SR) formula- tions of MPH were thus developed and available in the early 1980s for greater dosing convenience and patient compliance. But those first-generation SR formulations had their own shortcoming: a slow onset of action. Tris’s TRIS PHARMA, INC. v. ACTAVIS LABORATORIES FL, INC. 3

Quillivant XR® is an extended release formulation of MPH comprising an IR component and a SR component. It is a formulation that achieves a 45-minute therapeutic onset and 12 hours of therapeutic effect. Actavis challenged the validity of twenty-one claims from five patents at the district court, which found all these claims invalid under 35 U.S.C. § 103. On appeal, Tris requests that we reverse the district court’s judgment for seven claims in three patents: ’765, ’033, and ’390 patents. These seven appealed claims are: claims 4 and 10 of the ’033 patent; claims 6 and 20 of the ’765 patent; and claims 15, 16, and 20 of the ’390 patent. All of the appealed claims are directed to pharmacokinetic (PK) and pharmacodynamic (PD) properties of the Quillivant XR® extended release formulation. 1 These properties include: (1) an extended duration of action of about 12 hours; (2) a single mean peak PK profile; (3) a Tmax of about 4 to 5.25 hours (early Tmax); and (4) a 45-minute onset of ac- tion/therapeutic effects. All of the claims on appeal recite, among other properties, a single mean peak PK profile and 12-hour duration of effect limitation. All of the claims except for claim 20 of the ’765 patent recite the early Tmax limitation, and claim 10 of the ’033 patent and claim 20 of the ’765 patent are the only two claims that require a 45-minute onset of action. Claim 10 of the ’033

1 Pharmacokinetics is the study of what a person’s body does to a drug after administration. PK values are measurements of a drug’s behavior in a patient’s blood plasma. One such value relevant for this appeal, Tmax, represents the time after administration when the maxi- mum concentration of the drug in the blood plasma (Cmax) occurs. The shape of the PK profile, which reflects the plasma concentration of the drug in the patient’s body over time, is also an issue in dispute in this case. 4 TRIS PHARMA, INC. v. ACTAVIS LABORATORIES FL, INC.

patent is thus the only asserted claim that recites all four properties. A. Prior Art The district court found that the various combinations of the PK characteristics (single mean peak and early Tmax) and PD characteristics (a 45-minute onset of action and a 12-hour duration of effect) claimed in the patents- in-suit would have been obvious over the prior art. The prior art consists of a number of commercially available, second-generation, extended release formulations of MPH including Concerta®, Daytrana®, Focalin XR®, Metadate CD®, and Ritalin LA®; 2 scientific articles; and U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2010/0260844 (Scicinski). Below, we briefly describe the prior art relevant to this appeal. Concerta® is an extended release MPH tablet with a 12-hour duration of effect. J.A. 18, 23. The parties dis- pute whether or not Concerta® exhibits the single mean peak PK profile limitation because its plasma concentra- tion profile exhibits a sharp initial increase followed by a second increase. J.A. 19, 25. The parties also dispute whether Concerta® exhibits a 45-minute onset of action. Tris’s expert testified that the clinical efficacy study he performed showed that Concerta® has a 2-hour onset of action, J.A. 2213–14, while Actavis’s expert testified that second-generation products like Concerta® generally have an onset of action between 30 minutes to 2 hours. J.A.

2 The district court also listed Methylin ER as a commercially available controlled-release formulation. J.A. 16. Confusingly, it later presented PK data for Methylin Oral Solution. J.A. 22. We decline to discuss the Methylin prior art reference because it is unclear on which version the district court is relied. TRIS PHARMA, INC. v. ACTAVIS LABORATORIES FL, INC. 5

2069. Concerta® has a later Tmax of around 6.8 ± 1.8 hours. J.A. 2098. Daytrana® is an MPH patch that exhibits a single mean peak PK profile and a 12-hour duration of effect. J.A. 2215, 2069. However, Daytrana® has a 2-hour onset of action, and the record as to its Tmax is unclear. J.A. 2069. Focalin XR® is an extended release MPH capsule. While it achieves the claimed 12-hour duration of effect, JA 2069, and 45-minute onset of action, J.A. 3923, its PK profile does not exhibit a single mean peak, and it exhib- its a later Tmax around 6.5 hours. J.A. 2080, 2214–15, 2297. Moreover, Tris notes that Focalin XR® only consists of a single enantiomer d-MPH as the active ingredient whereas Quillivant XR® and the appealed claims include both enantiomers. Metadate CD® is a capsule version of MPH. J.A. 19. While it has an early Tmax of about 4.5 hours, J.A. 2297, and a 45-minute onset of action, J.A. 2069, the parties disagree as to whether its PK profile exhibits a single mean peak and whether it has a 12-hour duration of effect. J.A. 22–23. Like Concerta®, Metadate CD®’s PK profile exhibits a sharp initial increase followed by a second increase in MPH levels at a later time. J.A. 19.

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