1 / 28

© 2006 Millennium Pharmaceuticals Inc.

Janice Klunder and Sian Griffiths Legal Department, Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc. SLA Pharmaceutical & Health Technology Division Spring Meeting Boston March 19th, 2007. © 2006 Millennium Pharmaceuticals Inc. A Beautiful Friendship.

daphne
Télécharger la présentation

© 2006 Millennium Pharmaceuticals Inc.

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Janice Klunder and Sian Griffiths Legal Department, Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc. SLA Pharmaceutical & Health Technology Division Spring Meeting Boston March 19th, 2007 © 2006 Millennium Pharmaceuticals Inc.

  2. A Beautiful Friendship The information professional and the patent attorney/agent ©2006 Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

  3. Patent and Drug Development Timelines FDA Approval Hatch-Waxman Extension US and International Applications Filed Patent Expiration Patent Grant Years 0 1 6 11 ∕∕ 21 25 Development and FDA Review Maximum of 5 years extended term Maximum of 14 years of total patent term after NDA approval US Provisional Application Filed ©2006 Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

  4. What is a Patent? • A grant of a property right • Property boundaries determined by the claims of the patent • Right to exclude others from making, using, offering for sale, or selling the invention in the United States or “importing” the invention to the United States ©2006 Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

  5. Patent Rights - Exclusionary Right • A patent does NOT furnish the owner with the right to practice the claimed invention Company A Company A • Company B can exclude Company A from practicing the claimed invention Company B BUT, if Company A has a dominating patent • Company A can prevent Company B from practicing the broader claims, including Company B’s own invention ©2006 Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

  6. Requirements for Patentability • New (novel) • Nonobvious • Useful • Adequate Disclosure • Written description • Enablement • Best Mode ©2006 Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

  7. Novelty- 35 U.S.C. § 102 • The invention must be new, and cannot be patented if: • §102(a) - Before the applicant’s invention: • The invention was published (by another) anywhere in the world; or • The invention was known or used by others in this country • §102(b) - More than one year before applicant’s filing date: • The invention was published by anyone anywhere in the world (1-year grace period for applicant’s publications); or • The invention was in public use or on sale in this country • e.g., manufacturing agreements for clinical trial materials ©2006 Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

  8. Prior art Novel compounds Hypothetical Patent Claim: All compounds characterized by having Novelty- 35 U.S.C. § 102-Genus-Species RelationshipsExample 1: Species anticipates a claim to a genus Claim is invalid: Prior art species anticipates the claimed genus ©2006 Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

  9. Novelty- 35 U.S.C. § 102-Genus-Species RelationshipsExample 2: Genus does not anticipate a claim to an overlapping genus Prior art patent claim New claim is valid: Prior art genus does not anticipate the claimed genus Prior art Prior art patent does not disclose any specific compounds in the intersecting area Novel compounds New patent claim ©2006 Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

  10. Obviousness- 35 U.S.C. § 103 • An invention cannot be patented if the differences between the subject matter sought to be patented and the prior art are such that 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 • must be some suggestion or motivation to modify reference or to combine reference teachings • must be a reasonable expectation of success; AND • prior art reference(s) must teach or suggest all claim limitations ©2006 Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

  11. Prior art patent suggests making the combination Novelty- 35 U.S.C. § 102-Genus-Species RelationshipsExample 2: Genus does not anticipate a claim to an overlapping genus Prior art patent claim New claim is invalid: Claimed genus is obvious in view of the prior art patent Prior art Novel compound New patent claim ©2006 Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

  12. Triggers for Conducting a SearchDiscovery and Development • Early stage landscape analysis • Overview of patentability and FTO issues • Competitor assessment • Patent drafting • Patentability analysis • Development decision points • Freedom-to-operate analysis • Competitor assessment ©2006 Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

  13. Triggers for Conducting a SearchBusiness Development • Identification of business opportunities • Competitive intelligence • Due diligence • Patentability • Freedom-to-operate ©2006 Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

  14. Patent Information ProfessionalWho are they? • Information professional/analyst supporting Intellectual Property/Legal group • Specialized in patent information • Technology driven - chemical structure, biological sequence, medical devices • May require different tools and different knowledge ©2006 Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

  15. Patent Information ProfessionalKey skills required • General information skills • Business and company data, literature searching techniques etc. • Knowledge of patent databases • Full-text or indexed • Dates and countries of coverage ©2006 Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

  16. Patent Information ProfessionalKey skills required cont. • Specialized searching techniques and databases for different types of technology • Chemical structure or biological sequence • Data and Reporting • Use of tools for generation of reports • Access to full-text of patent documents ©2006 Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

  17. Patent Information ProfessionalKey skills required cont. • Understanding of patent law basics • Tailor searches appropriately • Provide “value-added” analysis • Patent data analysis • Manual • Using specialized software ©2006 Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

  18. Examples ©2006 Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

  19. Example 1Early Stage Landscape Analysis • Types of searches typically employed • Sequence searches on drug target • Structure searches on high-throughput screening hit families • Keyword based patent and literature searches • Competitor profiles ©2006 Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

  20. Example 1 Early Stage Landscape Analysis • Benefits to project team • May assist in the development of path forward for project team • Only one factor at early stage of project • Project should be science-driven unless significant obstacles are uncovered • Provide ongoing updates as project progresses ©2006 Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

  21. Example 2Patent Drafting – Patentability Analysis • No obligation to conduct a search but a thorough search is essential to identify relevant prior art and to avoid novelty and obviousness issues • More focused searches • Patent literature • Scientific literature • Commercial compounds ©2006 Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

  22. Example 2Patent Drafting – Patentability Analysis • Be aware of publication date vs date available in database • May monitor searches and update during patent application process • May do additional searches during patent prosecution in order to assist attorney in overcoming examiner’s rejections ©2006 Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

  23. Example 3Development Decision Points • Freedom-to-operate search and analyses • Searches on lead compound • Substructure, Markush, multiple sources • Searches on synthetic process route • Extensive keyword based patent searches across multiple databases • Often significant analyses of search results by attorneys required, information analyst assists ©2006 Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

  24. Example 3Development Decision Points • Freedom-to-operate search considerations • What is the question being asked • Breadth and scope will depend on type of decision point • Approach from several different angles • May lead to large results sets – consider displays for result sets that may expedite initial reviews ©2006 Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

  25. Example 3 Development Decision Points • Competitor Assessment • Can be more commercial focused depending on decision point • Provide supplementary patent information as needed • May include analysis of key competitor(s) patent landscape ©2006 Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

  26. Tips and Tricks Successful patent searching • Make the search process iterative • Get input into strategies from other non-patent analysts and clients • Have client sit with you when running searches • Explain clearly the limitations and potential caveats of sources and searches • Talk to clients about the best way for them to view/utilize your results • Keep up-to-date with key changes in patent information eg. IPC8, database coverage ©2006 Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

  27. Tips and TricksKeys to successful relationships with clients • Mutually trusting relationship between patent attorney/agent and information professional is critical • If information professional does not report into Legal, work hard to establish matrix team • One information professional for several attorneys/agents – try to keep up with priorities to effectively manage everyone’s filing dates and deadlines ©2006 Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

  28. Breakthrough science. Breakthrough medicine. ®

More Related