IN THIS ISSUE:

BC Court of Appeal dismisses consumer class action based on invalidation of VIAGRA patent »

Prohibition application against Mylan’s generic SENSIPAR dismissed; Court finds Amgen did not have a valid selection patent »

PMPRB dismisses Alexion’s motion to disqualify PMPRB counsel »

Recent Court decisions »

Court upholds Minister’s finding that CYSVIEW not entitled to data protection »

Federal Court grants Leo Pharma’s application against Teva relating to DOVOBET »

Settlement agreement between Pfizer and ratiopharm does not preclude Teva from pursuing section 8 damages against Pfizer for Teva-sildenafil »

New Court proceedings »

BC Court of Appeal dismisses consumer class action based on invalidation of VIAGRA patent

by Lynn Ing »

On December 8, 2015, the British Columbia Court of Appeal (BCCA), reversed a judge’s ruling that a proposed class action relating to sildenafil (VIAGRA), based on Pfizer’s unsuccessful litigation under the Patented Medicines (Notice of Compliance) Regulations (PMNOC Regulations), disclosed a cause of action sufficient for the purposes of certification under the province’s Class Proceedings Act (CPA): Low v Pfizer Canada Inc, 2015 BCCA 506. (See our article regarding the BC Supreme Court’s August 5, 2014 decision here.)

Read more »


Prohibition application against Mylan’s generic SENSIPAR dismissed; Court finds Amgen did not have a valid selection patent

by Paul Jorgensen »

The Federal Court released reasons, dated November 3, 2015, for dismissing Amgen’s application for an order prohibiting the Minister of Health from issuing a notice of compliance to Mylan for its cinacalcet tablets (Amgen’s SENSIPAR): Amgen Canada Inc v Mylan Pharmaceuticals ULC, 2015 FC 1244. Mylan alleged that Canadian Patent No. 2,202,879 (879 patent) was not a valid selection patent and was anticipated, obvious, and invalid for double-patenting. The Court issued a judgment dismissing the application on October 19, 2015, with reasons to follow, so as to avoid any lack of jurisdiction arising from the expiry of the 879 patent on October 23, 2015. The Court held that none of Mylan’s allegations were disproven by Amgen.

Read more »


PMPRB dismisses Alexion’s motion to disqualify PMPRB counsel

As reported previously, the Patented Medicine Prices Review Board (PMPRB or the Board), issued a notice of pricing regarding Alexion’s SOLIRIS (eculizumab) on January 22, 2015 and as reported separately, Alexion has challenged the constitutionality of the PMPRB provisions of the Patent Act in the Federal Court. On October 5, 2015, the Board dismissed Alexion’s motion to quash the notice of hearing based on a reasonable apprehension of bias of the Board’s Chairperson, Mary Catherine Lindberg. Alexion had submitted that Ms. Lindberg’s position as a director of Green Shield raises a reasonable apprehension of bias; the Board held that Alexion failed to establish the requisite standard of impartiality has not been met. The Board also dismissed Alexion’s motion to disqualify Isabel Raasch, Director, Legal Services and General Counsel for the Board from participating in the proceeding. The Board rejected Alexion’s submissions that confidential Alexion information possessed by the law firm representing Alexion was imputed to Ms. Raasch at the time she was a partner at the law firm and as a former partner at that law firm, she owes a duty of loyalty to Alexion, including as Ms. Raasch was not involved in the representation of Alexion and had no confidential information from Alexion. Alexion has sought judicial review.

Board Decision – October 5, 2015


Recent Court decisions

Court upholds Minister’s finding that CYSVIEW not entitled to data protection On August 10, 2015 (public reasons released December 2, 2015), the Court dismissed Photocure’s application, challenging the Minister’s denial of data protection for hexaminolevulinate hydrochloride (HAL HCl) (CYSVIEW) on the basis that HAL HCl was an “ester” of a previously approved medicinal ingredient, aminolevulinic acid hydrochloride (LEVULAN KERASTICK). The Court struck Photocure’s expert evidence as being more detailed than the evidence before the Minister and opining on the very issue the Minister was asked to determine, and held that the Minister’s decision was reasonable.

Photocure ASA v the Minister of Health, 2015 FC 959

Federal Court grants Leo Pharma’s application against Teva relating to DOVOBET On November 18, 2015, the Federal Court granted Leo Pharma’s application for a prohibition order against Teva’s generic version of DOVOBET, finding that Teva’s obviousness, lack of utility and insufficiency allegations in respect of Patent No. 2,370,565 were not justified. The patent generally relates to a formulation combining calcipotriol and betamethasone (two psoriasis drugs) and a solvent (limited to POP-15 in claim 17), resulting in a stable formulation of two drugs that were not previously combined due to pH incompatibility. The Court construed the claims as including stability as one of the characteristics of the claimed compositions.

With respect to obviousness, the Court held that the “patented combination was not obvious to try in light of the many other possible combinations that might also be tried.” In rejecting Teva’s argument of lack of sound prediction, including based on Leo’s acknowledgement that it has never understood why the patented combination was stable, the Court noted the evidence that all of the claimed alternatives are based on the same chemical scaffold, that “Leo need not establish anything close to certainty that all combinations would be useful”, and held that the skilled person would have understood the factual basis and line of reasoning based on the successful example in the patent. In dismissing Teva’s insufficiency allegation, the Court found that a “skilled person would be able to make the claimed formulation based on his or her own knowledge, possibly through some non-inventive trial and error”.

Teva has appealed to the Federal Court of Appeal.

Leo Pharma Inc v Teva Canada Limited et al, 2015 FC 1237

Settlement agreement between Pfizer and ratiopharm does not preclude Teva from pursuing section 8 damages against Pfizer for Teva-sildenafil On November 18, 2015, the Federal Court of Appeal dismissed Pfizer’s appeal of O’Keefe J.’s decision denying its motion for summary judgment in Teva’s action against Pfizer under section 8 of the Patented Medicines (Notice of Compliance) Regulations (PMNOC Regulations) for Teva-sildenafil.

O’Keefe J. found that a settlement agreement between Pfizer and ratiopharm (which later merged with Novopharm, subsequently becoming Teva) which precluded a section 8 action against Pfizer for ratio-sildenafil did not prevent Teva from pursuing section 8 damages against Pfizer in relation to Novo-sildenafil (now Teva-sildenafil). O’Keefe J. simultaneously granted Teva’s parallel motion for summary judgment, finding that Pfizer could not assert the agreement to reduce or otherwise affect Teva’s claims in the action.

Gauthier J.A. (Near and Webb J.J.A concurring) rejected Pfizer’s arguments relating to O’Keefe J.’s interpretation of the settlement agreement. Although it did not endorse O’Keefe J.’s reasoning, the Court agreed with his ultimate conclusion. The words of the relevant contractual provision, when read in light of the entire agreement and its factual context at the time it was executed, did not show that the parties intended to encompass damages arising from lost sales of Novo-sildenafil, a different drug, covered by an abbreviated new drug submission filed by what was then a different company. While Teva is bound by the settlement agreement by virtue of its amalgamation with ratiopharm, the Court found that “this does not mean that one can go back in time and rewrite the Agreement to apply it to claims arising from litigation excluded under a proper construction of the Agreement”.

Pfizer Canada Inc v Teva Canada Inc, 2015 FCA 257

Federal Court decision, 2015 FC 760


New Court proceedings

Patented Medicines (Notice of Compliance) Regulations

Medicine:

moxifloxacin (AVELOX)

Applicant:

Bayer Inc and Bayer Intellectual Property GmbH

Respondent:

International Pharmaceutical Generics Ltd and the Minister of Health

Date Commenced:

October 29, 2015

Court File No.:

T-1837-15

Comment:

Application for Order of prohibition until expiry of Patents Nos. 1,340,114 and 2,192,418. International Pharmaceutical Generics will await expiry of the 114 patent and alleges non-infringement and invalidity of the 418 patent.

Other proceedings

Medicine:

Not identified

Plaintiff:

Apotex Inc

Respondents:

Minister of Health and Attorney General of Canada

Date Commenced:

October 22, 2015

Court File No.:

T-1782-15, T-1783-15

Comment:

Applications for judicial review of two decisions of the Minister of Health to release certain records relating to an Apotex NDS in response to requests received by Health Canada pursuant to the Access to Information Act. Apotex asserts that Health Canada’s decisions are stated to be the same as the decision relating to a separate request, which is the subject of a separate judicial review application (T-1511-15).

Medicine:

eculizumab (SOLIRIS)

Applicant:

Alexion Pharmaceuticals Inc

Respondent:

Attorney General of Canada

Date Commenced:

November 03, 2015

Court File No.:

T-1855-15

Comment:

Application for judicial review of a decision of the Patented Medicine Prices Review Board that was made in a proceeding arising from excessive pricing allegations relating to Alexion’s drug SOLIRIS (see brief of decision above).

Medicine:

tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (VIREAD), emtricitabine/tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TRUVADA), efavirenz/emtricitabine/tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (ATRIPLA)

Plaintiff:

Gilead Sciences, Inc, Gilead Sciences Canada, Inc, and Bristol-Myers Squibb & Gilead Sciences LLC

Defendant:

Teva Canada Limited

Date Commenced:

November 09, 2015

Court File No.:

T-1888-15

Comment:

Infringement action relating to Patent No. 2,298,059, related to Teva’s action to impeach the 059 patent and Patent No. 2,261,619 in T-1529-12.

Applicant:

Apotex Inc

Respondents:

Minister of Health and Attorney General of Canada

Date Commenced:

November 12, 2015

Court File No.:

T-1915-15

Comment:

Application for judicial review of the decision of the Minister of Health to refuse to end its prohibition on granting NOCs and reviewing ANDSs and SANDs for products manufactured at Apotex Research Private Limited or having active pharmaceutical ingredient sourced from Apotex Pharmachem India Private Limited, in the face of the Federal Court’s judgment in T-224-14 (2015 FC 1161). For a complete list of the products that Apotex pleads are affected, see Apotex’s pleading here (para 38).

To check the status of Federal Court cases, please click here.

Follow @smartbiggar

RANKINGS AND RECOGNITIONS

Smart & Biggar honoured as the Canadian Patent Contentious Firm of the Year and Gunars Gaikis named Canadian Patent Litigation Attorney of the Year by LMG Life Sciences
Read more »

Smart & Biggar named Canada’s Intellectual Property Litigation Firm of the Year and Mark Evans named Canada’s Trademark Litigator of the Year by Benchmark Canada
Read more »

Smart & Biggar honoured as one of only two Canadian firms selected as a ‘Band One’ firm in Canadian intellectual property law in the 2016 edition of Chambers Canada
Read more »

Smart & Biggar once again leads in Canadian IP law as the only firm chosen at the top of the rankings in Ottawa, Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver in the 2015 edition of The Canadian Legal Lexpert® Directory
Read more »

Smart & Biggar lauded as a “Canadian IP titan” in the 2015 edition of IAM Patent 1000 — The World’s Leading Patent Practitioners
Read more »

Smart & Biggar chosen for the third year in a row as the Best Canadian IP Firm at The International Legal Alliance Summit & Awards
Read more »

Smart & Biggar lauded as one of only two Canadian firms to receive the highest ranking in the areas of patent prosecution and patent contentious and praised with more ‘IP Stars’ than any other firm in Canada in Managing Intellectual Property’s 2015 IP Stars Handbook: Patents
Read more »

Smart & Biggar is once again recognized as 'the biggest and deepest IP shop in Canada' by Benchmark Canada 2015
Read more »

Smart & Biggar repeats as Managing Intellectual Property’s 2015 Canadian Trademark Contentious Firm of the Year, and wins Canadian Trademark Milestone Case of the Year Award
Read more »

David Schwartz named the 2016 Biotechnology Law "Lawyer of the Year" in Ottawa by Best Lawyers
Read more »

The future is bright: Smart & Biggar dominates Canadian IP in LMG Rising Stars rankings
Read more »

26 Smart & Biggar lawyers recognized in the 2016 edition of The Best Lawyers in Canada
Read more »

For more information or to request a copy of any decision, pleading or legislation, please contact:

Nancy Pei (Editor)

 

 

 

CASE-LAW BRIEFS BY:
Andrew Mandlsohn
Kevin Siu

 
Urszula Wojtyra

 
Paul Jorgensen

 
Abigail Smith

LITIGATION CONTACTS
Gunars Gaikis
Nancy Pei

 
Steven Garland
Mark Biernacki

 
Sheldon Hamilton
Jeremy Want

 
Yoon Kang
Colin Ingram

PROSECUTION CONTACTS
Christopher Robinson
David Schwartz

 
Yoon Kang

 
Daphne Lainson

 
Thuy Nguyen

REGULATORY CONTACTS
Nancy Pei

 
Daphne Lainson

 

 

DISCLAIMER

The preceding is intended as a timely update on Canadian intellectual property and regulatory law of interest to the pharmaceutical industry. The contents of this newsletter are informational only and do not constitute legal or professional advice. To obtain such advice, please communicate with our offices directly.

Smart & Biggar/Fetherstonhaugh

Ottawa   /   Toronto   /   Montreal   /   Vancouver   /   Calgary

smart-biggar.ca

If you do not wish to receive future mailings of this kind (seminar invitations, greeting cards, notification of legal developments), please access the Manage Your Subscription link below to unsubscribe and to manage your settings.