Monday 25 October 2010

T 945/09 – Doctors Are Talkative


The present decision deals with an interesting case of prior public use in the context of clinical studies. In order to come to a conclusion the Board had to consider the question of how scientific articles are elaborated and tackle the problem of who should bear the burden of proof. Finally the question of whether a patient is bound by an implicit confidentiality agreement turns out to be relevant.

The opponent had pointed out that the patent (priority date : December 23, 1996) lacked novelty because of a prior public use reported in document D3, i.e. an article in a scientific journal. This article reported on the use of “taurolidine 2% as an antimicrobial lock solution for prevention of recurrent catheder-related bloodstream infections.” There was an indication in document D3 that the article had been received for publication on May 28, 1997 and was accepted for publication on November 18, 1997.

The OD concluded that on the basis of the information reported in document D3 the use of 2% taurolidine solutions to fill catheters started before the priority date of the contested patent, in a time-frame which spanned July 1995 and October 1996, depending on whether the date when the article was submitted or finally published was taken into account. This use occurred before the priority date.

However, the OD also concluded that all information concerning the use of taurolidine as catheter lock available to the acting medical team, to the patent proprietor (supplier of taurolidine) and to the patient was covered by an implicit obligation of confidentiality which stemmed from the specific circumstances of the case. In this situation the burden of proof was upon the opponent to establish that no implicit obligation of confidentiality existed, or that notwithstanding this obligation the invention was disclosed to the public. The opponent had not discharged this burden.

The Board sees things in a different light:

[3.1] In one of the alternative embodiments the claimed subject-matter of the patent in suit relates to
− the use of taurolidine in the manufacture of a solution
− for preventing infection and sepsis
− in a delivery system for administration of a desired liquid material to a patient,
− wherein said solution is employed to fill the system between each said administration
− so as to act as an antimicrobial seal
− serving to prevent said infection and sepsis.

[3.2] Document D3 teaches
− the use of taurolidine in the manufacture of a solution […]
− for preventing infection and sepsis […]
− in a delivery system for administration of a desired liquid material to a patient […],
− wherein said solution is employed to fill the system between each said administration […]
− serving to prevent said infection and sepsis […].

The person skilled in the art of total parenteral nutrition at the priority date of the patent in suit knows that the catheter lumen must be sealed during times when it is not used for administration of the nutrient, and refers to it as the lock-technique. This seal may be performed using heparin solution as is referred to in document D3 […].

Thus, the remaining feature

− so as to act as an antimicrobial seal

is also inevitably comprised in the teaching of document D3.

Consequently, the teaching of document D3 in the form of the reported use of taurolidine solution as a lock represents all the features of claim 1 of the patent in suit.

[3.3] Concerning the question of when this teaching of taurolidine-lock was performed, and in particular when it began to be performed, there is prima facie the clear-cut normal case that a paper is ready before it is sent to a journal for publication and there is normally no need for substantial amendments after the date of receipt. First there is the record of a success, then the idea and realisation of publication follow.

In the current case there is evidence for the particular date of receipt at the bottom of page 242 of document D3, left column: “Received for publication, May 28, 1997”.

Since any decision to publish a paper inevitably must lie in the period before its receipt for publication, the authors of document D3 must have decided to publish their experience in the time before May 1997. Following the time frame proposed by the [patent proprietor], this would have been just shortly after they had removed the catheter and implemented systemic antibiotic treatment (ten months after March 1996, which was January 1997) - stripped of the experience of a further 12 months free of infection.

According to these considerations, the board is satisfied that the starting date for the use of the taurolidine-lock can be set at 22 months before the date of receipt for publication, i.e. July 1995.

Doubting this normal sequence of actions, under the circumstances of the current case as set out, requires tangible evidence and not just one example of differing experience in another case and statements based on several mere assumptions (see e.g. following point [4.2] of this decision). The maxim “reus in excipiendo fit actor” applies here. The burden is on the [patent proprietor] to show that the actual facts and their sequence in truth were different.

[3.4] In document D3 it is pointed out that
“Ten months before the last infection, the patient was instructed to instil 1.5 mL taurolidine 2% daily into his central line after finishing his HPN (home parenteral nutrition) infusion and has continued to do so 2 years to date” (parenthesis inserted by the board).

Thus, the teaching according to claim 1 of the patent in suit was used by a patient while having “home parenteral nutrition” (HPN). Such a patient, aged around 30, after his long history of complications leading to multiple replacements of the catheter […] usually knows what is happening to him and he is interested in the nature of all actions intended to bring him relief. In addition, the “evaluation of the patient’s protocol of site care” mentioned in document D3 […] would not have been possible without exact explanation for instance of the purpose of the daily instillation of 1.5 mL of heparin solution. Consequently, it is also to be seen as a prerequisite that the intention connected with the heparin replacement by 1.5 mL of taurolidine solution […] was sufficiently explained to him.

In addition, there is no remark in document D3 indicating anything to the contrary.

Therefore, the board has to base its considerations and conclusions on the knowledge of the patient being clear and concise enough that he could take notice of the technique used after replacement of heparin-lock by taurolidine-lock, representing the teaching of claim 1 of the patent in suit.

There was also no reason for him to treat this knowledge as a secret, because at that time the acting doctors simply tried to apply taurolidine of whatever provenance using a technique they derived freely and easily from the state of the art common to them at that time […]. Obviously, they never saw anything special about that treatment, and consequently there is no indication of confidentiality in document D3.

[3.5] Accordingly, the board concludes that this teaching was performed beginning from July 1995 in the full knowledge of the patient without any obligation of confidentiality and thus was publicly available before the priority date of the patent in suit.

[4] In these circumstances the arguments of the [patent proprietor] cannot lead to success.

[4.1] To the extent that the [patent proprietor] calls for standards for a chain of evidence and arguments on the basis of the balance of probability, the board sees the argumentation of the appellant as being based on an indicative document, whereas the [patent proprietor] itself tries to establish a chain of evidence and arguments to cast doubt on a document which prima facie appears to be decisive. Thus, the required standards have a priori to be applied to the arguments of the [patent proprietor].

[4.2] The [patent proprietor] concludes from the age 29 mentioned at the beginning of document D3 and the following series of episodes of catheter-related bloodstream infections (CRBSIs) and line changes that the letter of authorisation dated 12 March 1996 (document D20b) is related to the same patient mentioned in this letter as “HP” at the age of 30. Since, as reported in documents D12 and D20a, it was the first shipment of taurolidine from the [patent proprietor] to the Canadian team after a long break, the [patent proprietor] draws the further conclusion that there were no reserves from the last shipment, and the beginning of the taurolidine treatment of the patient reported in D3 thus could not have started before this shipment of March 1996. Disclosure of document D3 was consistent with this view on the basis of a simple update before printing.

But this chain of various indicia, put together from different documents that are not all known in their full context, together with the attempt to establish the identity of the patient through indirect conclusions, is not well-founded enough to cast doubt on the straightforward starting date of taurolidine lock treatment of catheter-related bloodstream infections derived from the disclosure of document D3. In particular, the mere statement that there was an amendment of the text of document D3 is not sufficient to make such an event a reality.

[4.3] The fact that the taurolidine-lock treatment at least at the beginning of the last twelve months (“New tunnelled subclavian” from table 1 of document D3) was accompanied by systemic therapy with vancomycin and was maybe in parallel at any time with taurolidine as an additive to the nutritional solution (Ninewell’s method) is irrelevant with respect to the clear intention of the Canadian team to interrupt the pattern of catheter-related bloodstream infections by use of the taurolidine-lock technique. The test was made using the taurolidine-lock and in full awareness of the problems of the patient with regard to repeated sepsis originating from the catheter and with the intention of fighting this problem by using this lock technique […]. Addition of systemic vancomycin occasionally during this episode merely underlines that the lock-technique per se was directed to fight the sepsis originating from the catheter and not systemic sepsis.

Finally, document D3 even reports the authors as being convinced of the success of their use of antimicrobial taurolidine-lock with respect to infection being catheter-related […].

[4.4] Since the [patent proprietor] no longer maintains its argument that a real confidentiality agreement existed between itself as a supplier of taurolidine and the Canadian team as user, and since it merely affirms that confidentiality was inherent, only this inherency is to be assessed, in particular in relation to the decision of a technical board of appeal cited by the [patent proprietor] (T 1057/92):

In the cited decision the acting doctor is held not to be an appropriate witness to state what information was public […]. In the current case, however, it is sufficient that the patient was aware of the treatment he received, and public prior use does not depend on the doctor being a witness. In addition, in the cited decision novelty was discussed with regard to whether a trace of another compound was present or absent (see point [5] of the decision), while in the current case the straightforward use of a compound as such was crucial for assessment of novelty.

Moreover, the action in the Canadian hospital of using the taurolidine-lock was not typical of a clinical or even an experimental approach because it was dictated by the instant necessity to help a patient in a very desperate situation and thus had not been planned systematically as a scientific experiment.

[4.5] Thus, the subject-matter of the sole request does not meet the requirements of A 54.

Should you wish to download the whole decision, just click here.

Once more, great minds thought alike: the decision was reported almost simultaneously on Le blog du droit européen des brevets.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Caselaw is the last bad decision. Here is one.

Myshkin said...

Why do you (Anonymous) consider it a bad decision?

Personally I have some doubt that the patient is a member of the public (i.e. an arbitrary member). He received the treatment in his capacity as a patient, which is something one can generally not choose to be. The patient could be said to be in some kind of special relationship to the donor of the information (T 1081/01, r. 7).

Assuming the patient is not a member of the public, one could still argue that, given the lack of confidentiality agreement, the patient being free to communicate the information to the public counts as a disclosure. However, even assuming the patient was sufficiently skilled to inform the public (which the Boards seems to say is the case), there is no indication that the patient at any point in time has expressed his willingness to inform the public. According to T 1081/01, r. 7 and 8, some special act of making the information available to the public is required.