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    November 24, 2006

    Abbott Laboratories v. Baxter Pharmaceutical Products, Inc. (Fed. Cir. 2006)

        By Donald Zuhn --

    In an appeal from a District Court judgment of validity and noninfringement, the Federal Circuit reversed the District Court's finding of validity, holding the asserted claims in U.S. Patent No. 5,990,176 to be anticipated by the disclosure in U.S. Patent No. 5,684,211.

    Abbott Laboratories #2 The '176 patent relates to degradation-resistant compositions of the inhalation anesthetic sevoflurane and processes for preventing the degradation of sevoflurane.  Abbott Laboratories (Abbott), an assignee of the '176 patent, had discovered that its sevoflurane product was being degraded by Lewis acids located on the interior of the containers in which the sevoflurane was being shipped.  This degradation reaction yielded hydrofluoric acid, which is highly dangerous if inhaled.  Abbott also discovered that sevoflurane could be protected from degradation by mixing the sevoflurane with water, which would bind to and deactivate the Lewis acids.  Neither the degradation of sevoflurane by Lewis acids nor the protective effects of water were known in the art at the time of the '176 invention.

    Baxter Seeking to ship their own sevoflurane product, Baxter Pharmaceutical Products, Inc. and Baxter Healthcare Corp. (Baxter) filed a certification of noninfringement and invalidity of the '176 patent with the FDA, giving rise to the suit with Abbott.  Before the District Court, Baxter argued, inter alia, that the '211 patent disclosed a composition of water-saturated sevoflurane that met all of the limitations of the asserted claims of the '176 patent, and therefore, anticipated the '176 patent.  The District Court, however, determined that because the purpose of the '211 patent was not to produce sevoflurane in its final useable form, the purposes of the '211 and '176 patents were different, and therefore, under Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. v. Ben Venue Labs., Inc., the '211 patent did not anticipate the '176 patent.  246 F.3d 1368 (Fed. Cir. 2001) ("Newly discovered results of known processes directed to the same purpose are not patentable because such results are inherent.").

    Federal Circuit Seal In rejecting the District Court's application of Bristol-Myers Squibb, the Federal Circuit noted that the purpose-based distinction set forth in that case "is applicable only to process claims [and] does not speak to composition claims."  The Federal Circuit, therefore, determined that the District Court erred by applying Bristol-Myers Squibb to sustain the validity of the composition claims in the '176 patent.  With respect to the process claims in the '176 patent, the Federal Circuit disagreed with the District Court's determination that the processes of the '211 and '176 patents were not directed to the same purpose, finding that "[a]ll of the steps of the '176 patent are disclosed in the '211 patent in furtherance of the same purpose: the delivery of safe, effective sevoflurane anesthetic.  All that is contributed by the method claims of the '176 patent is the recognition of a new property of the prior art process."

    The Federal Circuit also rejected Abbott's argument that at the time of the '211 patent, nobody knew that the water-saturated sevoflurane composition disclosed in the '211 patent could resist Lewis acid degradation, stating that "[o]ur cases have consistently held that a reference may anticipate even when the relevant properties of the thing disclosed were not appreciated at the time."  Noting that the "lack of knowledge [regarding the property of degradation resistance] is wholly irrelevant to the question of whether the '176 patent claims something 'new' over the disclosure of the '211 patent," and finding that the claimed property was inherently present in the '211 patent, the Federal Circuit determined that the '211 patent's disclosure of water-saturated sevoflurane anticipated the claims of the '176 patent.  The Federal Circuit, therefore, reversed the District Court's finding of validity.

    Abbott Laboratories v. Baxter Pharmaceutical Products, Inc. (Fed. Cir. 2006)
    Panel: Circuit Judge Bryson, Senior Circuit Judge Archer, and Circuit Judge Gajarsa
    Opinion by Circuit Judge Gajarsa

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