Teva Pharmaceuticals USA, Inc. (“Teva”) appeals from a final judgment of the United States District Court for the District of Delaware in favor of The Procter & Gamble Company (“P & G”) in three cases upholding, the validity of P & G’s U.S. Patent 5,583,122 (the “'122 patent”).
Proctor & Gamble Co. v. Teva Pharmaceuticals USA, Inc.,
I. BACKGROUND
The '122 patent claims the compound risedronate, the active ingredient of P & G’s osteoporosis drug Actonel®. In August 2004, P & G sued Teva for infringement of the '122 patent after Teva notified P & G that it planned to market risedronate as a generic equivalent of Actonel®. Specifically, P & G alleged that Teva’s proposed drug infringed claim 4 of the '122 patent for the compound risedronate, claim 16 for pharmaceutical compositions containing risedronate, and claim 23 for methods of treating diseases using risedronate. In its defense, Teva argued that the '122 *993 patent was invalid as obvious in light of P & G’s expired U.S. Patent 4,761,406 (the “'406 patent”), filed on June 6, 1985 and issued on August 2, 1988. Alternately, Teva argues that the '122 patent is invalid for obviousness-type double patenting.
Risedronate, the subject of the contested claims, is a member of a group of compounds referred to as bisphosphonates. Bisphosphonates, in general, are active in inhibiting bone resorption. The first two promising bisphosphonates studied for the treatment of metabolic bone diseases, etidronate (EHDP) and clodronate, had clinical problems which prevented their commercialization. P & G conducted a significant amount of experimentation involving hundreds of different bisphosphonate compounds, but could not predict the efficacy or toxicity of the new compounds. Eventually, researchers at P & G identified risedronate as a promising drug candidate.
On December 6, 1985, risedronate’s inventors applied for a patent on the compound. P & G is the owner by assignment of the '122 patent, entitled “Pharmaceutical Compositions Containing Geminal Diphosphonates,” which issued on December 10,1996.
Risedronate is neither claimed nor disclosed in the '406 patent. Instead, the '406 patent, entitled “Regimen for Treating Osteoporosis,” claims an intermittent dosing method for treating osteoporosis. As the trial court noted, the '406 patent “addresses the central problem seen in bisphosphonates at the time, namely that they inhibited bone mineralization, by teaching the use of a cyclic administrative regimen to achieve a separation of the benign effect of anti-resorption from the unwanted side effect of anti-mineralization in patients.”
Proctor & Gamble,
From the testimony at trial, the district court concluded that the '406 patent would not have led a person of ordinary skill in the art to identify 2-pyr EHDP as the lead compound. In light of the extremely unpredictable nature of bisphosphonates at the time of the invention, the district court also found that a person of ordinary skill in the art would not have been motivated to make the specific molecular modifications to make risedronate. The district court concluded that unexpected results of risedronate’s potency and toxicity rebut a claim of obviousness. The district court found that secondary considerations of non-obviousness supported its conclusions. Similarly, the court found that the '122 patent was not invalid for obviousness-type double patenting. This consolidated appeal followed. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(1).
II. DISCUSSION
I. Standard of Review
“On appeal from a bench trial, this court reviews the district court’s conclusions of law de novo and findings of fact for clear error.”
Golden Blount, Inc. v. Robert H. Peterson Co.,
II. Patent Obviousness — Legal Standard
Under the U.S. Patent Act, an invention cannot be patented if “the subject matter as a whole would have been obvious at the time the invention was made to a person having ordinary skill in the art to which said subject matter pertains.” 35 U.S.C. § 103(a). Patents are presumed to be valid.
Kao Corp. v. Unilever U.S., Inc.,
The obviousness determination turns on underlying factual inquiries involving: (1) the scope and content of prior art, (2) differences between claims and pri- or art, (3) the level of ordinary skill in pertinent art, and (4) secondary considerations such as commercial success and satisfaction of a long-felt need.
Graham v. John Deere Co.,
If a patent challenger makes a prima facie showing of obviousness, the owner may rebut based on “unexpected results” by demonstrating “that the claimed invention exhibits some superior property or advantage that a person of ordinary skill in the relevant art would have found surprising or unexpected.”
In re Soni,
III. Identification of a Lead Compound
An obviousness argument based on structural similarity between claimed and prior art compounds “clearly depends on a preliminary finding that one of ordinai*y skill in the art would have selected [the prior art compound] as a lead compound.”
Takeda,
We need not reach this question because we conclude that even if 2-pyr EHDP was a lead compound, the evidence does not establish that it would have been obvious to a person of ordinary skill at the time of the invention to modify 2-pyr EHDP to create risedronate.
IV. Obviousness of Risedronate in Light of the Prior Art
To decide whether risedronate was obvious in light of the prior art, a court must determine whether, at the time of invention, a person having ordinary skill in the art would have had “reason to attempt to make the composition” known as risedronate and “a reasonable expectation of success in doing so.”
PharmaStem Therapeutics, Inc. v. ViaCell, Inc.,
The district court concluded that, even if 2-pyr EHDP were a lead compound, it would not render the '122 patent’s claims on risedronate obvious because a person having ordinary skill in the art would not have had reason to make risedronate based on the prior, art. The district court’s findings also support the conclusion that there could have been no reasonable expectation as to risedronate’s success.
The question of obviousness “often turns on the structural similarities and differences between the claimed compound and the prior art compound[ ].”
Eisai Co. Ltd. v. Dr. Reddy’s Labs., Ltd.,
To successfully argue that a new compound is obvious, the challenger may show “that the prior art would have suggested making the specific molecular modifications necessary to achieve the claimed invention.”
Takeda,
A known compound may suggest its homolog, analog, or isomer because such compounds often have' similar properties and therefore chemists of ordinary skill would ordinarily contemplate making them to try to obtain compounds with *996 improved properties---- [However,] it remains necessary to identify some reason that would have led - a chemist to modify a known compound in a particular manner to establish prima facie obviousness of a new claimed compound.
At trial, P & G’s expert witnesses testified that, in 1985, a person having ordinary skill in the art realized that the properties of bisphosphonates could not be anticipated based on their structure. Additionally, the trial court relied on contemporaneous writings from Herbert Fleisch, the preeminent authority on bisphosphonates during the relevant time period. Dr. Fleisch wrote in 1984 that “every compound, while remaining a bisphosphonate, exhibits its own physical-chemical, biological and therapeutic characteristics, so that each bisphosphonate has to be considered on its own. To infer from one compound the effects in another is dangerous and can be misleading.” Herbert Fleisch,
Chemistry and Mechanisms of Action of Bisphosphonates,
in Bone Resorption, Metastasis, and Diphosphonates 33-40 (S. Garattini ed., 1985). In this case, P & G synthesized and tested 2-pyr EHDP, risedronate (3-pyr EHDP) and 4-pyr EHDP, another structural isomer. Confirming the unpredictability of bisphosphonates, test results for 4-pyr EHDP revealed that it was not active in inhibiting bone resorption despite its close relationship with potent compounds. In light of the Supreme Court’s instruction in
KSR,
the Federal Circuit has stated that, “[t]o the extent an art is unpredictable, as the chemical arts often are, KSR’s focus on [] ‘identified, predictable solutions’ may present a difficult hurdle because potential solutions are less likely to be genuinely predictable.”
Eisai
Additionally, there was an insufficient showing that a person of ordinary skill in the art would have had a “reasonable expectation of success” in synthesizing and testing risedronate.
PharmaStem,
Cases following
KSR
have considered whether a given molecular modification would have been carried out as part of routine testing.
See, e.g., Takeda,
In this case, there is no credible evidence that the structural modification was routine. The district court found that the appellee’s expert was evasive on this-topic, stating that the witness “did not directly respond to most questions posed to him about whether it would be common for a chemist who develops a pyridine compound to conceive of and make [2-pyr EHDP, 3-pyr EHDP, and 4-pyr EHDP] isomers.”
Proctor & Gamble,
Accordingly, we conclude that the district court did not clearly err in finding that Teva had not established a prima facie case of obviousness as to' the challenged claims of the '122 patent.
V. Unexpected Results
The district court found that, even if Teva could establish a prima facie case of obviousness, P & G had introduced sufficient evidence of unexpected results to rebut such a showing. Such evidence included “test data showing that the claimed composition! ] possesses] unexpectedly improved properties or properties that the prior art does not have.”
In re Dillon,
Nonetheless, we note that P & G’s witnesses consistently testified that the properties of risedronate were not expected. For example, Dr. Benedict testified that he and other researchers did not predict the potency of risedronate. Ms. McOsker testified that she was “very surprised” by the low dose at which risedronate was effective. Dr. Miller stated that the superior properties of risedronate were unexpected and could not have been predicted. In a test to determine the lowest dose at which these compounds caused toxic reactions, risedronate outperformed 2-pyr EHDP by a substantial margin. Risedronate showed no observable toxic effect at a dose of 0.75 mg P/kg/day, while 2-pyr EHDP’s “no observable effect level” was only 0.25 mg P/kg/day. In another test involving live animals, 2-pyr EHDP was lethal at a dose of 1.0 mg P/kg/day while risedronate was *998 not. Ultimately, the district court weighed the evidence and evaluated the credibility of the witnesses in concluding that P & G had introduced sufficient evidence of unexpected results to rebut any finding of obviousness.
VI. Secondary Considerations of Non-Obviousness
Secondary considerations of non-obviousness include the commercial success of the invention at issue and its satisfaction of a long-felt need.
B.F. Goodrich Co. v. Aircraft Braking Sys. Corp.,
The district court found that risedronate, marketed as Actonel, has been an undisputed commercial success and satisfied a long-felt unmet need.
2
This conclusion was based on the testimony of Dr. Daniel C. Smith, who stated that risedronate experienced favorable growth and had amassed $2.7 billion in aggregate domestic sales. The district court based its finding of a long-felt unmet need on the fact that, in the mid-1980s, osteoporosis was recognized as a serious disease and existing treatments were inadequate. However, because the competing drug alendronate was available before risedronate, Teva contends that risedronate could not have satisfied any unmet need. Teva argues that the long-felt need must be unmet at the time the invention becomes available on the market, when it can actually satisfy that need. To support this argument, Teva cites
Monarch Knitting Mach. Corp. v. Sulzer Morat GmbH,
VII. Whether the '406 Patent is Pri- or Art
As an alternative to its position that risedronate was not' obvious, P & G argues that the '406 patent should not be considered prior art with respect to the '122 patent because risedronate was first synthesized by P & G before the '406 patent was filed. At trial, Dr. Benedict, one of the inventors named in the '122 patent, testified that he synthesized risedronate in May 1985. P & G submitted a portion of Dr. Benedict’s laboratory notebook which contains a May 3, 1985 entry detailing the structure of risedronate and the procedure for its synthesis, but this entry was unwitnessed and was not corroborated by any other evidence.
*999
“It is well established that when a party seeks to prove conception via the oral testimony of a putative inventor, the party must proffer evidence corroborating that testimony.”
Shu-Hui Chen v. Bouchard,
VIII. Obviousness-Type Double Patenting
In addition to its obviousness defense, Teva also asserted that the '122 patent was invalid for double patenting. The double patenting doctrine is designed to prevent a patent owner from extending his exclusive rights to an invention through claims in a later-filed patent that are not patentably distinct from claims in the earlier filed patent.
Geneva Pharm., Inc. v. GlaxoSmithKline PLC,
Having concluded that risedronate was not obvious under 35 U.S.C. § 103, we similarly conclude that the '122 patent is not invalid for obviousness-type double patenting. Additionally, we agree with the district court that the claims of the '122 patent are distinct from the claims of the '406 patent. Comparing the claims of the '122 patent to those of the '406 patent, we note that, while claims 4 and 16 of the '122 patent explicitly claim the risedronate compound, the '406 patent claims an intermittent dosing regimen for the treatment of osteoporosis and claims no new compounds. Accordingly, Teva failed to present clear and convincing evidence of overlap between the claims of the two patents to invalidate the '122 patent based on obviousness-type double patenting.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm.
AFFIRMED
Notes
. Appellant’s expert testified that “if someone was aware that [2-pyr EHDP] was safe and effective, they would immediately in terms of the drug discovery effort, make the [3-pyr EHDP]." However, the district court concluded that this witness “had no specialized experience in the area of bisphosphonates” aside from his preparation to testify in the Iitigation.
Proctor & Gamble,
. The court rightly gave little weight to risedronate’s commercial success because the prior art '406 patent was also assigned to P & G. As of December 6, 1985, the filing date of the '122 patent, 2-pyr EHDP could be found only in a pending application for the '406 patent, which was not available to the public.
See Merck & Co., Inc. v. Teva Pharma. USA, Inc.,
