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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Synthon BV v Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd [2017] EWCA Civ 148 (21 March 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/148.html Cite as: [2017] EWCA Civ 148 |
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A3 2015 2162 |
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
PATENTS COURT
Mr Justice Birss
Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BRIGGS
and
LORD JUSTICE FLOYD
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SYNTHON B.V. |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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TEVA PHARMACEUTICAL INDUSTRIES LIMITED |
Respondent |
____________________
Andrew Waugh QC and Thomas Hinchliffe QC (instructed by Bird & Bird LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 8 February 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Floyd:
Technical background
i) Polymerisation of the NCAs of tyrosine, alanine, γ-benzyl glutamate and N-TFA lysine.
ii) Deprotection of the γ-benzyl group used to protect the carboxylic acid group in glutamic acid. The product produced by this step is sometimes referred to as TFA-glatiramer acetate because the TFA protecting group is still present. This is the important step for the purposes of this case.
iii) A second deprotection step in which the TFA protecting group is removed by treatment with piperidine in water.
iv) Purification.
The patent
"As a result, another measure taken to ensure purity, e.g. in the GA product, was the use of a non-metal reactor for the production of 33% HBr/acetic acid solution. The reactor used for the production of HBr/acetic acid solution was glass lined in order to prevent the formation of impurities which could later affect the purity of, e.g., the GA. In order to prevent contact of HBr solution with metal, parts of the piping were Teflon-lined. Similarly, other types of non-reactive, acid resistant non-metal apparatus can be used to prevent the formation of trace metal ions in the HBr/acetic acid solution. The use of a non-metal apparatus for the production of HBr/acetic acid solution was successful in eliminating the red colour from the GA. When the non-metal apparatus was used for the production of HBr/acetic acid solution, the result was that the solution was free of metal ions and the red GA was not formed."
The claims
The judgment of Birss J
"130. The skilled person would set out to identify the likely cause of the colour. They might well measure the metal ion level as part of that investigation. However to take Synthon's approach and jump to the conclusion that metal ions should be eliminated is not the activity of the uninventive skilled person. I am not satisfied the skilled person would just try things without having identified the cause of the colour. I am not satisfied that even a substantial research project over a number of months would identify that metal ions are the/or a likely cause. If having failed to pin down the cause a skilled person then changed tack and started just trying out different expedients, alighting upon elimination of metal ions may or may not be one of the expedients to test. However either way I reject the idea that that sort of exercise would be indicative of obviousness. It is not.
131. Finally, just as in the novelty section, I am not satisfied that using non-metallic vessels would necessarily eliminate the colour (because there may be metal ions from other sources) nor am I satisfied that it would have been obvious to go as far as to eliminate all metal equipment altogether unless the skilled person was motivated to do so by a finding that metal ions were indeed likely to be the cause of the problem. It follows that the step of using non-metallic vessels would not inevitably solve the problem. If it did not then assuming the skilled person had not identified the cause of the problem when doing what Synthon contend for, they are no further forward. As before whether this has an impact on sufficiency is a matter I will address below."
The arguments on Synthon's appeal
Discussion – Synthon's appeal
Metal ion impurities – claim 3
Free bromine claims
"I think all I meant there was an amount that you cannot detect by the naked eye. As I say, I am not concerned in this paragraph to quantitate in any respect the level of contamination of the HBr in acetic acid by the colour because I simply believe it is impossible to do that."
"A. I think all I meant there was that it was too low to be detected by the naked eye. Probably -- that is a good question. I did actually look into this. It was talking certainly less than one part in 1000, I think -- probably much less than that. It is not that easy to find absolute values for these things.
Q. Indeed. There is actually nothing in the literature that actually helps you on the amount of bromine that leads to colour, is there?
A. No.
Q. You did look for it?
A. I did look for it, yes.
Q. And you could not find anything?
A. I could not find any absolute correlation between the absolute amount of bromine in a solution and the colour as evinced by, for example, the APHA scale, which is referred to later in the patents – – and I did look."
Test for brominated tyrosine – claim 29
The arguments on Teva's appeal
i) HBr/AcOH solution with less than 1000 ppm metal ion impurities;
ii) Trifluoroacetyl polypeptides with less than 1000 ppm metal ion impurities, and glatiramer acetate as a paradigm example of the polypeptides of the application;
iii) that trifluoroacetyl glatiramer acetate (TFA-GA) is the immediate precursor to glatiramer acetate in the synthetic process disclosed in the application;
iv) the need to reduce or eliminate metal ion impurities because of the ability of TFA-GA to chelate metal ions, thereby producing an unwanted red colour in glatiramer acetate.
Discussion – Teva's appeal
Conclusion
Lord Justice Briggs
Lord Justice Kitchin