News from Abroad -- Does an SPC for a Biological Product Cover a Biosimilar? Guidance from Norway

McDonnell Boehnen Hulbert & Berghoff LLP
Contact

In December 2016, the Norwegian Court of Appeal handed down its decision in Pharmaq v Intervet[1], which concerns the validity of Intervet's SPC for a viral vaccine for preventing pancreatic disease (PD) in salmonid fish.  Followers of SPC case law will be aware that questions relating to this case have previously been considered by the EFTA Court[2], having been referred by the Oslo District Court.  The advisory opinion of the EFTA Court was subsequently interpreted by the District Court who found in favour of Intervet[3].  The recent decision concerns Pharmaq's appeal.

The case is of general interest in that it relates to the extent to which an SPC for a biological product may be considered to encompass closely-related alternatives such as biosimilars.  The guidance of the EFTA court was that an SPC is invalid due to non-compliance with Article 4 of the SPC Regulation[4], to the extent that it has been granted with a wider scope than that set out in the relevant Marketing Authorisation (MA).  However, the EFTA Court also proposed that an SPC for a viral vaccine could extend to cover a specific strain of virus encompassed by the claims of the patent but not mentioned in the MA, provided said strain constitutes the "same active ingredient" as the authorised product, and has therapeutic effects within the same indications for which the MA was granted.

Applying this guidance, the Oslo District Court had found in a majority decision that the competing products of Pharmaq and Intervet did constitute the "same active ingredient", thus holding in favour of Intervet.  However, reconsidering the EFTA Court's guidance in the light of new evidence before it, the Norwegian Court of Appeal has now overturned that earlier decision.

Claim 1 of Intervet's patent explicitly recited the deposited virus strain (of type SAV-1) that was used in its own vaccine.  However, the claim referred also to "closely-related strains which share similar genotypic or phenotypic characteristics".  In proceedings relating to the patent, the virus strain (of type SAV-3) used in Pharmaq's competing product was found to infringe the claim by virtue of this "closely-related" feature.  Intervet's MA specifically describes the deposited strain used in its own product.  Nonetheless, when applying for an SPC from the Norwegian Patent Office, Intervet stipulated a definition of the product which precisely mirrored the wording of claim 1 of the patent, thus including the reference to "closely-related strains".

The Norwegian Patent Office was evidently concerned that this product definition was broader than that provided by the MA, and thus problematic under Article 4 of the SPC Regulation.  There is some suggestion that the examiner's preference would have been to limit to closely-related strains of the SAV-1 type, but he found no basis for this interpretation in the patent.  Therefore, recognising a legitimate concern that an SPC limited solely to the deposited strain could be easily circumvented, the Office awarded Intervet the benefit of the doubt -- in the knowledge that Pharmaq were bringing a legal challenge to the SPC and that the question would ultimately be decided in the courts.

The proceedings before the Court of Appeal spent a considerable amount of effort interpreting the EFTA Court's guidance, and the extent to which Intervet's and Pharmaq's products might be considered to constitute the same active ingredient.  As part of their argumentation, Intervet relied upon the decision of the CJEU in Farmitalia[5] This long-standing decision established that where a patent claims a chemical compound and the marketing authorisation specifies a particular salt, the SPC is interpreted to cover alternative salts and esters of the same compound, which are in principle therapeutically equivalent.  It has been argued (including by Intervet) that similar reasoning should apply for closely-related biological products in order for the purpose of the SPC Regulation to be met.

The Norwegian Court of Appeal recognised the importance of Farmitalia in establishing that the purpose of the SPC Regulation would not be satisfied if therapeutically equivalent salts and esters were not covered by an SPC for a small chemical entity.  They also recognised the desirability of establishing a corresponding definition for biological medicinal products which, in line with Farmitalia, prevents third parties from escaping the scope of an SPC by making only minor changes to an active ingredient that otherwise remains therapeutically equivalent.  However, they noted that Farmitalia provides limited guidance for biological products (unsurprisingly given the age of that decision) and the Court was concerned also to balance the scope of protection of SPCs for such products against the other objectives of the SPC regulation.  In particular, the aim that improved medicinal products should not be kept off the market to the detriment of human or veterinary health.  Much of the Norwegian Court of Appeal's decision is thus spent grappling with these conflicting pressures.

They found what they considered to be helpful guidance in a 2009 judgment of the Dutch Appellate Court submitted by Pharmaq,  referred to as the "Yeda judgment" (2000809060/1/H3).  In that judgment, the Dutch Court upheld the decision of the Dutch Patent Office to grant an SPC only in respect of the specific active ingredient Adalimumab (a monoclonal antibody) mentioned in the relevant MA, despite the patent claims encompassing other antibodies specific for the same target.  Yeda had argued that the other antibodies would be expected to have the same therapeutic effect as Adalimumab, and pointed to Farmitalia as supporting grant of an SPC with a broader product definition.  The Dutch Court found that it was not proven that other antibodies would have the same therapeutic effect, and furthermore that even closely related biological medical products are qualitatively different to salts and esters of a chemical product.  The Dutch Court noted that even minor differences in a biological product could be significant for the quality, safety, and efficacy of the said product.

The Norwegian Court of Appeal adopted much of the same reasoning, stating that for there to be a different active ingredient, the difference between two products must be expressed such that there is a practical and appreciable effect on the quality, safety, and efficacy of the medicine in question.  Intervet argued that any such difference must be systematic, consistent and significant in order for two products to be found different.  The Court expressed some doubt that a "significant" standard was too high a threshold, but did not need to consider this further since, on the evidence before it, they found that Pharmaq's product was systematically, consistently and significantly more efficacious against SAV-3 infection than Intervet's product.

Having reached this conclusion, the Norwegian Court of Appeal decided that Intervet's SPC was invalid for lack of compliance with Article 4 of the SPC Regulation.  The Court noted that this is not a ground for invalidity under Article 15 of the SPC Regulation, and thus was obliged to define Article 15 as "not exhaustive" in order to make their decision.  Interestingly, the Court also felt that they had no legal basis to amend the SPC to provide a compliant product definition, even though the guidance from the EFTA Court appeared to suggest such an option.  The EFTA Court's guidance was that an SPC would be invalid to the extent that it covers anything other than the authorised product.

The decision of the Norwegian Court of Appeal is not yet final since an appeal to the Norwegian Supreme Court remains possible at time of writing.  In addition, it remains to be seen whether the CJEU and/or other national courts will adopt similar reasoning.  Nonetheless, we offer the following conclusions and recommendations:

1.  Applicants should be alert to the risk involved if the definition of the product offered in an SPC application could be interpreted as broader than the authorised medicinal product -- a definition that is too broad may result in loss of the entire SPC and it may be impossible to amend after grant.

2.  The approach of the CJEU in Farmitalia for salts and esters of small chemical compounds has been confirmed, but it appears likely that this will not be found to be directly applicable to (complex) biological products.

3.  There may be some scope for an SPC to protect biological products that are "therapeutically equivalent" to an authorised product, but it remains unclear how best to define the product in order to allow for this -- language relating to a lack of any systematic, consistent (and significant) difference in quality, safety and efficacy may be helpful.

4.  Where possible (bearing in mind patent claim scope and time limits) consider applying for a separate SPC based on the applicant's own patent and a competitor's MA.  Such an application could use a narrow product definition directed specifically to the competitor's authorised biological product.  This will permit an SPC application for the applicant's own product to be presented with a definition that minimises the risk mentioned in 1.

[1] Translation of decision available here.
[2] Translation of decision available here.
[3] Similar status to the CJEU for matters referred by the national courts of the EFTA states: Norway, Iceland, Liechtenstein. Copy of the advisory opinion available here.
[4] Article 4: Within the limits of the protection conferred by the basic patent, the protection conferred by a certificate shall extend only to the product covered by the authorisation to place the corresponding medicinal product on the market and for any use of the product as a medicinal product that has been authorised before the expiry of the certificate.  Full regulation available here.
[5] C-392/97.  Full decision available here.Bottom of Form

This article was reprinted with permission from J A Kemp.

DISCLAIMER: Because of the generality of this update, the information provided herein may not be applicable in all situations and should not be acted upon without specific legal advice based on particular situations.

© McDonnell Boehnen Hulbert & Berghoff LLP | Attorney Advertising

Written by:

McDonnell Boehnen Hulbert & Berghoff LLP
Contact
more
less

McDonnell Boehnen Hulbert & Berghoff LLP on:

Reporters on Deadline

"My best business intelligence, in one easy email…"

Your first step to building a free, personalized, morning email brief covering pertinent authors and topics on JD Supra:
*By using the service, you signify your acceptance of JD Supra's Privacy Policy.
Custom Email Digest
- hide
- hide