With regard to a sustained release pharmaceutical composition formulated by combining the teachings given in two prior art references, the Supreme Court held that the inventiveness thereof cannot be denied, even if all of the technical features of the composition are disclosed in these references, if it is found that a skilled person in the art would have difficulty predicting the effects of the combined composition, and if the technical characteristics of the prior art technologies differ from each other, rendering it difficult to combine them (Supreme Court Case No. 2019 Hu 11756 dated April 8, 2021).
▶Background of the Case
Korean Patent No. 1245919 (“subject
patent”) relates to a sustained release pharmaceutical composition for treating
acromegaly, malignant carcinoid tumors and vasoactive intestinal peptide
tumors, allowing for the prolonged release of the known active ingredient,
octreotide, over a period of more than three months so that the plasma level of
octreotide is maintained within the therapeutic range during the entire period.
Specifically, the subject invention is
directed to a sustained release pharmaceutical composition in the form of
microparticles comprising octreotide (a peptide drug) and two different
polylactide-co glycolide polymers (PLGAs), wherein the lactide (L):glycolide
(G) monomer ratios of the two PLGAs are different from each other, and there
are two different microparticles in terms of the lactide:glycolide monomer
ratio of the PLGA (e.g., L:G = 75:25 and L:G = 100:0).
In 2013, a competitor filed an invalidation
trial against the subject patent, but the Trial Board upheld the validity of
the subject patent. On appeal, however, the Patent Court decided that the
specification failed to satisfy the description requirement. In an appeal
against the Patent Court decision, the Supreme Court held that the
specification providing animal experimental data alone satisfied the
description requirement and remanded the case to the Patent Court (for more
information, please refer to the FirstLaw IP News article, entitled “Animal
Experimental Data in Pharmaceutical Invention Held to Meet Description
Requirement,” Issue No. 2018-04, December 2018).
On remand, the competitor submitted a new
prior art reference (D6) and argued that the subject patent was invalid for
lack of inventiveness over D6 and D1, the main prior art reference that had
already been submitted during the invalidation trial proceeding.
▶The Patent Court Decision
The Patent Court noted that, while D1
disclosed a sustained release composition in the form of microparticles
comprising octreotide as an active ingredient and two different PLGAs where the
L:G monomer ratios of the two PLGAs were both 50:50, D1 was different from the
subject invention in that the microparticles in D1 were prepared by supplying
various concentrations of the two PLGAs through a gradient pump, meaning there
were a variety of different microparticles in the composition due to the use of
the gradient pump. The Patent Court, 1 however, found that the subject
invention and D6 were identical in terms of the technical idea, and were
different only in terms of the active ingredient contained in the
microparticles. Specifically, Example 4 of D6 described a pharmaceutical
composition in the form of microparicles for a prolonged release of three
months or more where leuprorelin, an analog of leutenizing hormone releasing
hormone (LHRH), was contained in two types of microparticles having different
lactide:glycolide monomer ratios as recited in the subject invention.
The Patent Court determined that the
subject invention, and D1 and D6, when read in combination, were substantially
identical in their technical field and object of the invention, and there was
no indication in any of the prior art that taught away from combining the
disclosures of D1 and D6. Therefore, the Patent Court denied inventiveness of
the subject invention when viewed by combining D1, relating to a sustained
release formulation in the form of microparticles containing octreotide, and
D6, disclosing a sustained release formulation with the same composition as the
subject invention in connection with another active ingredient (leuprorelin)
and its prolonged release effect.
▶The Supreme Court Decision
On appeal, however, the Supreme Court
determined that a person skilled in the art would not have easily conceived the
subject invention by combining D1 and D6 because it would be difficult to
expect that the sustained release effect of D6 would still be obtained when
combined with D1, and the technical characteristics of D1 and D6 were different
from each other.
Specifically, the Supreme Court found that
it would be difficult for a person skilled in the art to expect that the same
sustained release effect as shown in D6 would also be exhibited when the method
of preparing the sustained release composition of leuprorelin was applied to
the octreotide formulation of D1 because the leuprorelin of D6 was different
from the octreotide of the subject invention in physicochemical properties and
structures directly affecting the release rate of the formulation, such as
molecular shape, reactivity with PLGA, half-life and minimum effective
concentration, initial burst release, etc. Further, the Supreme Court stated
that a person skilled in the art would not have easily expected an in vivo
prolonged release of a drug over a period of about three months, as shown in
the subject invention, because more than 30% of octreotide was released in 7
days in an in vitro release test of the octreotide formulation disclosed in D1,
and the relationship between in vitro release effect and in vivo release effect
of octreotide was not clear at the time of the filing date of the subject
patent. Moreover, the Supreme Court noted that it would not have been obvious
for a person skilled in the art to combine D1 and D6, whose technical
characteristics were different from each other in that, while multiple
microparticles were individually prepared and then mixed in a certain ratio so
as to provide a formulation of microparticle mixtures exhibiting a desired
release pattern in D6, D1 aimed to provide a preparation method of sustained
release microparticle formulation having various compositions using a single
continuous process for the purpose of improving the method of D6, which was
deemed complex and economically unsound.
Accordingly, the Supreme Court reversed the
Patent Court’s decision by holding that a person skilled in the art would not
have easily conceived the subject invention by combining D1 and D6 without
hindsight knowledge from the subject invention.
The validity of the patented invention was subsequently confirmed in the proceeding remanded to the Patent Court (Patent Court Case No. 2021 Heo 2663 dated October 8, 2021; final and conclusive).