Yeda Research and Development v. Mylan Pharmaceuticals Inc.

906 F.3d 1031
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedOctober 12, 2018
Docket2017-1594; 2017-1595; 2017-1596
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 906 F.3d 1031 (Yeda Research and Development v. Mylan Pharmaceuticals 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
Yeda Research and Development v. Mylan Pharmaceuticals Inc., 906 F.3d 1031 (Fed. Cir. 2018).

Opinion

Reyna, Circuit Judge.

*1035 In this consolidated appeal, Appellant Yeda Research & Development Co., Ltd. challenges the Patent Trial and Appeal Board's final written decisions finding the claims of U.S. Patent Nos. 8,232,250, 8,399,413, and 8,969,302 unpatentable as obvious in three inter partes review proceedings. We affirm the Board's decisions. 1

BACKGROUND

I. Patents at Issue

Yeda Research and Development Co., Ltd. ("Yeda") is the assignee of U.S. Patents Nos. 8,232,250, 8,399,413, and 8,969,302 (the '250, '413, and '302 patents, respectively), all entitled "Low Frequency Glatiramer Acetate Therapy." The patents, collectively referred to as the "Copaxone patents," share a common specification and claim priority to the same two provisional applications. See J.A. 267, 279, 291. The earliest priority date of the Copaxone patents is August 20, 2009. Id.

The Copaxone patents describe and claim COPAXONE ® 40mg/mL, a treatment for relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis ("RRMS"). RRMS is a form of multiple sclerosis, an autoimmune disorder that causes the body's immune system to attack the central nervous system. RRMS is characterized by unpredictable relapses followed by periods of remission with no new signs of disease activity.

The active ingredient in COPAXONE ® 40mg/mL is glatiramer acetate ("GA"), a synthetic mixture of polypeptides. GA is also known as "copolymer 1" or "Cop. 1." COPAXONE ® 40mg/mL is supplied as a single-dose prefilled syringe. Broadly, the treatment consists of the injection of 40mg of GA three times a week, abbreviated "40mg GA 3x/week." Relevant to this appeal, side effects of GA injections include injection-site reactions ("ISRs") and immediate post-injection reactions ("IPIRs"). ISRs are physical symptoms at the injection site, such as swelling or itchiness. IPIRs are reactions immediately following an injection, such as flushes, sweating, or palpitations.

Prior to COPAXONE ® 40mg/mL, in 1996 the Food and Drug Administration ("FDA") approved COPAXONE ® 20mg/mL, a regimen consisting of the daily injection of 20mg GA. Daily GA injections were known to subject patients to discomfort, including side effects in the form of ISRs and IPIRs. J.A. 6956.

For analyzing the obviousness of the Copaxone patents, a key limitation of the claims is the administration of a 40mg GA dose in three subcutaneous injections over seven days. Claim 1 of the '250 patent is representative:

1. A method of alleviating a symptom of re-lapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis in a human patient suffering from relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis or a patient who has experienced a first clinical episode and is determined to be at high risk of developing clinically definite multiple sclerosis comprising administering to the human patient a therapeutically effective regimen of three subcutaneous injections of a 40 mg dose of glatiramer acetate over a period of seven days with at least one day between every subcutaneous injection, the regimen being sufficient *1036 to alleviate the symptom of the patient.

'250 patent col. 16 ll. 35-45.

Certain claims of the '250 and '413 patents further require improved tolerability and/or reduced frequency of injection reactions in the claimed regimen as compared to 20mg daily. '250 patent col. 17 l. 24-col. 18 l. 6; '413 patent col. 16 ll. 51-54.

Apart from claim 1 of the '302 patent, all independent claims require at least one day between doses. '250 patent col. 16 ll. 35-45, col. 17 l. 25-col. 18 l. 6, col. 18 ll. 19-26; '413 patent col. 16 ll. 26-36, col. 18 ll. 1-13, col. 18 ll. 14-28; '302 patent col. 17 ll. 4-12. Claim 1 of the '302 patent does not specify any particular interval between doses, but dependent claims 4 and 5 limit injections to certain combinations of days of the week, all with at least one day between injections, and independent claim 10 of the '302 patent requires that the injection be administered "three times per week with at least one day between every subcutaneous injection." '302 patent col. 16 ll. 37-41, col. 16 ll. 47-58, col. 17 ll. 4-12.

II. Prior Art References

The first clinical trial for using GA to treat multiple sclerosis was in 1987 by Dr. Bornstein et al. ("Bornstein"), 2 which was followed later by a Teva Phase III clinical trial in 1995. Both Bornstein and the Phase III trial tested 20mg GA daily. J.A. 7279-80, 7282-85, 6895-7235. The 20mg/day dose was selected without performing conventional optimal-dose-finding studies. J.A. 7239.

The Bornstein study showed that GA administered subcutaneously for two years at a daily dose of 20mg "produced clinically important and statistically significant beneficial effects." J.A. 7284. Participants in both Bornstein and the Phase III trial reported ISRs and IPIRs as side effects. J.A. 7284, 6934. The Phase III trial noted "adverse experience" as the main reason contributing to patient dropout, and "[t]he most common adverse event associated with dropout was injection site reaction." J.A. 6934. A Phase III trial reviewer made recommendations for future researchers to explore dose-response and dose-ranging studies, asking "Is 20 mg the optimum dose? Are daily injections necessary?" J.A. 6956.

In 1996, following both Bornstein and the Phase III clinical trial, FDA approved Teva's New Drug Application ("NDA") for COPAXONE ® 20mg, 20mg GA injected daily. In its 1996 Summary Basis of Approval ("SBOA"), the FDA recommended that Teva "evaluate the necessity of daily [GA] injections as opposed to more infrequent intermittent administration of the drug" because the daily dosing regimen "seems like it would subject the patient to an excessive amount of discomfort if it is not necessary to maintain efficacy." J.A. 7146.

A 2002 study by Flechter et al. 3 ("Flechter") evaluated the treatment of RRMS with 20mg of GA administered every other day. J.A. 7236-40. Flechter concluded that "alternate-day treatment with Copolymer 1 is safe, well tolerated, and probably as effective as daily Copolymer 1 in reducing relapse rate and slowing neurologic deterioration." J.A. 7240. Flechter also noted that patient dropout rates decreased when GA was administered every *1037 other day as opposed to daily. J.A. 7240 ("It should be stressed that the dropout rate was lower in the alternate-day group than in the daily-injection regime (39.7% versus 60.3%, p < 0.01).").

A prior art patent application, International Patent Application No. WO 2007/081975, Method of Treating Multiple Sclerosis ("Pinchasi"), was published in 2007. J.A. 6857-88. Pinchasi discloses a 40mg GA, every other day dosing regimen for the treatment of RRMS.

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906 F.3d 1031, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yeda-research-and-development-v-mylan-pharmaceuticals-inc-cafc-2018.