Lead Opinion
Jаnssen Pharmaceutica N.V., Janssen L.P., and Synaptech, Inc. (“Janssen”), appeal from a final judgment of the United States District Court for the District of Delaware. After a bench trial, the district court determined that the claims of U.S. Patent No. 4,663,318 (“the '318 patent”) were invalid for lack of enablement. In re '318 Patent Infringement Litig.,
BACKGROUND
Janssen’s '318 patent claims a method for treating Alzheimer’s disease with galanthamine. Claim 1 is representative. It claims “[a] method of treating Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias which comprises administering to a patient suffering from such a disease a therapeutically effective amount of'galanthamine or a pharmaceutically-acceptable acid addition salt thereof.” '318 patent col.3 11.6 — 10.
Alzheimer’s disease is a form of progressive dementia in which memory and mental abilities steadily decline. At the time of the '318 patent’s application in early 1986, researchers had observed a correlation between Alzheimer’s disease symptoms and a reduced level of the neurotransmitter acetylcholine in the brain. During neurotransmission, acetylcholine is released by a transmitting neuron and binds to receptors on a receiving neuron. The two main types of acetylcholine receptors are nicotinic receptors and muscarinic receptors. Nicotinic and muscarinic receptors are present in neurons in both the central nervous system (which includes the brain and spinal cord) and the peripheral nervous system (which cоnnects the central nervous system to muscles and organs).
In early 1986, many researchers focused primarily on the importance of central nervous system muscarinic receptors in developing treatments for Alzheimer’s disease. At that time, galanthamine (also spelled “galantamine”), a small molecule compound, was known to inhibit acetylcholinesterase, an enzyme that breaks down acetylcholine. Acetylcholinesterase inhibitors like galantamine increase the amount
The specification for the '318 patent was only just over one page in length, and it provided almost no basis for its stated conclusion that it was possible to administer “an effective Alzheimer’s disеase cognitively-enhancing amount of galanthamine.” Id. col.1 ll.47-48. The specification provided short summaries of six scientific papers in which galantamine had been administered to humans or animals.
The specification then provided brief summaries of four scientific papers reporting brain effects and positive effects on memory from administering galantamine to animals. See id. col.1 ll.22-33. The first paper concluded that galantamine intravenously administered to rabbits affected brain wave activity. The second paper concluded that galantamine increased short-term memory in dogs. The third and fourth papers concluded that galantamine reversed amnesia in rats that had been induced by administering the drug scopolamine. The specification did not suggest that such scopolamine-induced amnesia was similar to Alzheimer’s disease. The specification did not provide analysis or insight connecting the results of any of these six studies to galantamine’s potential to treat Alzheimer’s disease in humans.
The specification noted that another pri- or art scientific paper described an animal testing model for replicating in animals the acetylcholine deficit and other effects of Alzheimer’s disease.
In April 1986 an examiner at the United States Patent and Trademark Office (“PTO”) rejected the claims in the '318 patent’s application for indefiniteness and obviousness. The examiner found the patent application’s claim of a method of “diagnosing” Alzheimer’s disease to be indefinite, because diagnosing “has nothing to do with treating” and because the claims thus “fail[ed] to particularly point out and distinctly claim the subject matter which applicant regards as the invention.” J.A. 4108. The examiner also found the patent application’s claim of a method of treating Alzheimer’s disease obvious — in light of the animal studies cited in the specification describing the use of galantamine to treat scopolamine-induced amnesia and in improving short-term memory. The examiner did not reject the application for lack of enablement.
In September 1986 the applicant, Dr. Davis, responded to the examiner’s indefiniteness rejection by narrowing the claim language, deleting the words “and diagnosing” from the original application’s claim of “[a] method of treating and diagnosing Alzheimer’s disease.” Dr. Davis responded to the obviousness rejection by explaining that, because the brains of the animals in the studies cited in the specification were “normal” (rather than having “physiological changеs” similar to Alzheimer’s disease), the studies were conducted under “circumstances having no relevance to Alzheimer’s disease,” and that it thus would be “baseless” to predict from such studies that galantamine would be useful to treat Alzheimer’s disease. J.A. 4407.
In addition, Dr. Davis responded by stating that “experiments [are] underway using animal models which are expected to show that treatment with galanthamine does result in an improvement in the condition of those suffering from Alzheimer’s disease,” and that it was “expected that data from this experimental work will be available in two to three months and will be submitted to the Examiner promptly thereafter.” J.A. 4405. The '318 patent issued on May 5, 1987. Dr. Davis did not learn the results of the animal testing experiments — which suggested that galantamine could be a promising Alzheimer’s disease treatment — until July 1987, аfter the '318 patent had issued. These studies required several months and considerable effort by researchers at the Johns Hopkins University under the supervision of Dr. Joseph T. Coyle. No such testing results were ever submitted to the PTO.
After the '318 patent issued in May 1987, Dr. Davis licensed the patent in November 1995 to Janssen. In February 2001 Janssen received approval from the Food and Drug Administration (“FDA”) for using galantamine to treat mild to moderate Alzheimer’s disease.
The district court found that the '318 patent was neither anticipated nor obvious. However, the district court concluded that the '318 patent was invalid for lack of enablement on two distinct grounds. The district court found that the specification did not demonstrate utility because relevant animal testing experiments were “not finished ... by the time the '318 patent was allowed” and the specification provided only “minimal disclosure” of utility. '318 Patent Infringement Litig.,
Janssen timely appealed. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1291 and 1295(a)(1).
DISCUSSION
Enablement is a question of law we review without deference. Invitrogen Corp. v. Clontech Labs., Inc.,
The enablement requirement is stated in 35 U.S.C. § 112.
Enablement is closely related to the requirement for utility.
The enablement requirement of 35 U.S.C. § 112, ¶ 1 requires that the specification adequately discloses to one skilled in the relevant art how to make, or in the case of a process, how to carry out, the claimed invention without undue experimentation. The utility requirement of 35 U.S.C. § 101 mandates that*1324 any patentable invention be useful and, aсcordingly, the subject matter of the claim must be operable. If a patent claim fails to meet the utility requirement because it is not useful or operative, then it also fails to meet the how-to-use aspect of the enablement requirement.
(emphasis added, citations and footnote omitted). See also 3 Donald A. Chisum, Chisum on Patents § 7.03(6) (2007). The Supreme Court in Brenner v. Manson,
The utility requirement prevents mere ideas from being patented. As we noted in Genentech, Inc. v. Novo Nordisk A/S,
The utility requirement also prevents the patenting of a mere research proposal or an invention that is simply an object of research. Again as the Supreme Court stated in Brenner, “a patent is not a hunting license. It is not a reward for the search, but compensation for its successful conclusion.”
Typically, patent applications claiming new methods of treatment are supported by test results. But it is clear that testing need not be conducted by the inventor. In addition, human trials are not required for a therapeutic invention to be patentable. Our predecessor court, the United States Court of Customs and Patent Appeals, held in In re Krimmel that patent applications need not “prove that compounds or other materials which [the applicant] is claiming, and which [the appliсant] has stated are useful for ‘pharmaceutical applications’ are safe, effective, and reliable for use with humans.”
We have held that results from animal tests or in vitro experiments
In this case, however, neither in vitro test results nor animal test results involving the use of galantamine to treat Alzheimer’s-like conditions were provided. The results from the '318 patent’s proposed animal tests of galantamine for trеating symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease were not available at the time of the application, and the district court properly held that they could not be used to establish enablement.
Nor does Janssen contend that the pri- or art animal testing summarized in the '318 patent application’s specification established utility. Indeed, both in responding to the examiner’s obviousness rejection and in responding to the obviousness defense at trial, the inventor (Dr. Davis) and Janssen’s witnesses explicitly stated that the utility of the invention could not be inferred from the prior art testing described in the application. The response of the inventor, Dr. Davis, to the examiner’s obviousness rejection stated, with regard to studies cited in the specification showing galantamine’s ability to reverse scopolamine-induced amnesia in normal rats, that “[n]othing in this teaching leads to an expectation of utility against Azheimer’s disease.” J.A. 4409. The response of Dr. Davis also stated that “predicting] that galanthamine would be useful in treating Alzheimer’s disease just because it has been reported [in the prior art studies cited in the specification] to have an effect on memory in circumstances having no relevance to Alzheimer’s disease” would be “as baseless as a prediction that impaired eyesight due to diabetes would respond to devices (eyeglasses) or treatments (eye exercises) known to improve the vision of normal persons.” J.A. 4407. Janssen’s other expert Dr. Raskind testified that studying a compound’s effects on scopolamine-induced amnesia “ignores the whole оther [nicotinic] part that’s damaged in Alzheimer’s disease” and thus “doesn’t mimic Alzheimer’s disease.” J.A. 9301-02. The district court agreed, finding, for example, that the utility of galantamine in treating scopolamine-induced amnesia did
However, Janssen argues that in some circumstances utility may be established without testing the proposed treatment in the claimed environment or a sufficiently similar or predictive environment; that is, Janssen argues that utility may be established by analytic reasoning. Although no case has been called to our attention where utility was established simply by analytic reasoning,
Janssen goes on to argue that the specification here establishes utility by analytic reasoning. Relying on trial testimony, Janssen reasons that the selection and description of the prior art tests, while not directly pertinent, “set[] forth the evidence from existing studies demonstrating galantamine’s effects on central nicotinic as well as muscarinic receptors and connected] it to a model for Alzheimer’s therapy rendering those effects therapeutically relevant.” Janssen Reply Br. 17 n. 2. Janssen asserts that the prior art tests summarized in the specification would lead one skilled in the art to infer that galantamine affected the ability of acetylcholine to bind to both nicotinic and muscarinic receptors in the brain. Janssen also asserts that the animal tests proposed in the specification as a model for Alzheimer’s disease would further lead one skilled in the art to infer that the model’s method of impairing brain acetylcholine availability would allow both muscarinic and nicotinic effects to be observed. Janssen thus argues that because nicotinic receptors in the brain are involved with the ability to learn, the specification suggested that galantamine could have beneficial effects on learning (unlike prior art treatments, which had primarily affected muscarinic receptors). These insights, however, are nowhere described in the specification. Nor was there evidence that someone skilled in the art would infer galantamine’s utility from the specification, even if such inferences could substitute for an explicit description of utility.
Janssen relies on the testimony of its expert Dr. Coyle, the scientist who later supervised the performance of the animal studies suggested in the specification. He testified that the specification “connected the dots” for galantamine as a potential Alzheimer’s disease treatment, listing the “dots” as “[g]alanthamine in humans safe
Thus, at the end of the day, the specification, even read in the light of the knowledge of those skilled in the art, does no more than state a hypothesis and propose testing to determine the accuracy of that hypothesis. That is not sufficient. See Rasmusson v. SmithKline Beecham Corp.,
The '318 patent’s description of using galantamine to treat Alzheimer’s disease thus does not satisfy the enablement requirement because the '318 patent’s application did not establish utility.
For the foregoing reasons, the decision of the district court is affirmed.
AFFIRMED
COSTS
No costs.
Notes
. The six additional claims in the '318 patent claim the administration of galantamine orally, parenterally, or intracerebroventricularly in various dosage ranges.
. The specification stated:
Galanthamine and acid addition salts thereof have, for many years, been known to have anticholinesterase properties. Cozanitis in Anaesthesia 29 163-8 (1974) dеscribes the effect of galanthamine hydrobromide on plasma cortisol of patients receiving relaxant anaesthesia and Cozanitis et al in Acta Anesth. Scand. 24:166-168 (1980) describe the effect of galanthamine on plasma ACTH values during anaethesia. These studies showed an increase in both plasma cortisol and plasma ACTH when galanthamine was administered to patients together with atropine.
Il’yuchenok et al (Chemical Abstracts 70 36296K) describe the appearance of érhythm on an electroencephalogram when galanthamine is administered intravenously to rabbits.
Increase in short-term memory in dogs by use of galanthamine is described by Krauz in Chemical Abstracts 81 72615Z.
The antagonistic effect of galanthamine to scopolamine-induced amnesia in rats is describеd by Chaplygina et al in Chemical Abstracts 86 115157Z, and in Zhurnal Vysshei Nervnoi Deiatelnosti imeni P. Pavlova (MOSKVA) 26:1091-1093, 1976.
'318 patent col.l 11.11-33.
. The specification of the '318 patent stated:
The following test provides a good animal model for Alzheimer’s disease in humans: A selective lesion is placed in a subcortical nucleus (nucleus basalis of Meynert) with a resultant cortical cholinergic [i.e., acetylcholine] deficiency, similar in magnitude to that seen in early to moderate stage Alzheimer’s disease. Numerous behavioral deficits, including the inability to learn and retain new information, characterizes this*1322 lesion. Drugs that can normalize these abnormalities would have a reasonable expectation of efficacy in Alzheimer's disease. Haroutunian, V, Kanof P, Davis, KL: Pharmacological alleviations of cholinergic-lesion-induced memory defects in rats. Life Sciences 37:945-952, 1985.
'318 patent col.2 11.45-57.
. A Paragraph IV certification "is defined as an act of infringement for litigation purposes.” Sanofi-Synthelabo v. Apotex, Inc.,
. The statute states:
The specification shall contain a written description of the invention, and of the manner and process of making and using it, in such full, clear, concise, and exact terms as to enable any person skilled in the art to which it pertains, or with which it is most nearly connected, to make and use the same, and shall set forth the best mode contemplated by the inventor of carrying out his invention.
35 U.S.C. § 112, ¶ 1 (emphases added).
. The utility requirement is stated in 35 U.S.C. § 101:
Whoever invents or discovers any new and useful process, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter, or any new and useful improvement thereof, may obtain a patent therefor, subject to the conditions and requirements of this title.
(emphases added).
. "In vitro” experiments are performed in artificial environments outside living organisms (such as in a test tube or culture media),
. In Brana we held that the patent applicants had established the utility of claimed therapeutic compounds by presenting in vitro test results and evidence of structural similarity between the claimed and prior art compounds when filing the application.
. Cases cited by Janssen did not involve patents that relied solely on analysis to establish utility. See, e.g., Brana,
. As stated in the MPEP, establishing "a reasonable correlation between” a compound’s activity and its asserted therapeutic use may involve “statistically relevant data documenting the activity of a compound or composition, arguments or reasoning, documentary evidence (e.g., articles in scientific journals), or any combination thereof.” MPEP § 2107.03 (8th ed„ Rev.7, July 2008). See also Fisher,
. Janssen also relies on conclusory testimony by defendants' witness Dr. Levey to establish that the spеcification demonstrated utility. See J.A. 8329-30 (Dr. Levey agreeing that "the idea of using galanthamine as a treatment!! ] for Alzheimer’s disease in 1986 [was a] scientifically reasonable judgment”). The testimony by defendants' witness Dr. Levey was in support of an obviousness defense and was not credited by the district court, and Dr. Levey testified that if the district court rejected his opinion that the '318 patent was obvious, then it was his opinion that the patent was not enabled. See J.A. 8248, 8253.
. Under circumstances where the record would not support a finding of utility, the absence of findings by the district court on the issue of whether a person skilled in the art could infer galantamine's utility from the selected prior art described in the '318 patent’s specification is not error. Where disputed factual findings are irrelevant, it is not error not to make them. See 28 U.S.C. § 2111 ("On the hearing of any appeal ... the court shall give judgment after an examination of the record without regard to errors or defects which do not affect the substantial rights of the parties.”); Sampson v. Murray,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I respectfully dissent from the majority’s affirmance because the district court did not undertake the required legal analysis to determine whether an ordinarily skilled artisan reading the patent would understand it to reveal a credible utility for the invention. In addition, the district court failed to make the factual findings necessary to support the ultimate legal conclusion regarding enablement. See Koito Mfg. Co. v. Turn-Key-Tech, LLC,
The parties do not dispute that Dr. Davis’s insight regarding galantamine’s utility for treating Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) was correct; later animal studies and human clinical trials proved and confirmed galantamine’s effectiveness. The relevant question here is whether, at the time Dr. Davis filed her application, the patent’s written description would have credibly revealed to an ordinarily skilled artisan galantamine’s utility for AD treatment. See In re Cortright,
Dr. Davis did not receive any confirming data until after the '318 patent was allowed. In view of the prior art disclosures regarding the flaws of physostigmine [a compound chemically similar to galantamine] in AD treatment, discussed previously in the context of obviousness, it does not follow that a person of ordinary skill in the art, reading the '318 patent, would have recognized that galanthamine would be effective in treating AD in the absence of any experimental proof. Put another way, since plaintiffs rely exclusively on the prior art to establish enablement, the court agrees with defendants that the '318 patеnt cannot both be non-obvious and enabled.
In re '818 Patent Infringement Litig.,
The district court’s reasoning is flawed. In general terms, an inventor may look at the prior art differently than those before her, arrive at a novel and nonobvious in
Unfortunately, the district court committed error here by focusing generally on what the prior art does or does not teаch — the primary factual consideration underlying obviousness — while neglecting to consider what the patent text discloses to an ordinarily skilled artisan — the primary factual consideration underlying enablement. Specifically, although the '381 patent describes particular findings from six prior art publications, the district court noted only one such publication, see District Court Decision,
Nor was the district court’s error harmless. See Majority Op. at at 1327-28 n. 12. Because the district court failed to make the required fact-findings, which stemmed from its erroneous legal analysis, the majority must engage in extensive appellate fact-finding in order to affirm the district court’s judgment. It is improper for an appellate court to become the fact-finder. This court cannot presume to have the skills of the ordinary artisan and cannot substitute its weighing of the evidence and factual conclusions for those of the fact-finder. According to the majority, even though the district court failed to make the appropriate findings or conduct the proper legal analysis, we need not vacate here because “the record would not support a finding of utility.” Id. I respectfully disagree. The record clearly includes evidence that may support a finding of utility, which the majority discounts in order to reach its
Finally, I disagree with the majority opinion’s emphasis on the sufficiency of the evidence presented by Janssen. As both parties correctly note, the question before us is “whether the defendants have shown, by clear and convincing evidence, that the patent’s marshalling of evidence from the technical literature of galantamine’s effects, combined with its model for Alzheimer’s therapy, is not sufficient for a skilled artisan to believe the invention’s utility.” Appellant’s Br. at 27; Appellee’s Br. at 29. That is a correct articulation of the question presented on appeal because, unlike many of the cases upon which the majority and district court rely, the claims in dispute here are issued patent claims, and are thus. presumed valid. Yet, the majority fails to establish the defendants’ burden and instead focuses almost exclusively on the sufficiency of Janssen’s showing and the merit of Janssen’s arguments. See, e.g., Majority Op. at 1327 (“Similarly, [the testimony of Janssen’s expert witness, Dr. Raskind] falls far short of demonstrating that a person of ordinary skill in the art would have recognized that the specification conveyed the required showing of utility.”). That focus is improper. Because the district court erred as a matter of law and failed to make certain required factual findings, we cannot defer to the district court’s legаl conclusion or fact-findings, and thus, it is particularly problematic for the majority to require Janssen to demonstrate on appeal that its patent is valid.
For the foregoing reasons, I respectfully dissent from the majority’s decision.
. In particular, the majority discounts both the disclosures made in the '318 patent specification and the value of the post-filing test results offered to support a finding of credible utility. In so doing, the majority attempts to distinguish this court’s decision in In re Brana,
Moreover, the majority’s relentless focus on the need for timely test results as evidence of utility appears to conflate credible utility in the context of enablement, at issue here, with the notion of reduction to practice, which is not at issue. See, e.g., Majority Op. at 1326 (”[N]o case has been called to our attention where utility was established simply by analytic reasoning [without testing].”). Such a conflation risks the introduction of an actual reduction-to-practice requirement into patent law, contrary to more than a century of settled precedent. See The Telephone Cases,
