Recently, the District Court in Düsseldorf
lifted several ex-parte preliminary injunctions granted for Merck Sharpe &
Dohme Corp. (MSD) against various generic companies. The District Court’s decision
in German language can be found (HERE) as well as the English translation thereof (HERE). Phillip
Rektorschek (Taylor Wessing) and Derk Vos (Maiwald), who acted i.a. for Hexal
AG and 1A Pharma, have provided the following summary on the case:
"Earlier this year MSD, based on SPC DE 12
2004 000 026.1, applied for preliminary injunctions against eight generic
companies in order to prevent market entry of generic versions of MSD’s
cholersterol-lowering combination product Inegy®. Inegy® is a fixed dose
combination of the actives ingredients ezetimibe and simvastatin. While, the
present SPC in question, DE 12 2004 000 026.1 is directed to a product covering
ezetimibe or pharmaceutically acceptable salts thereof in combination with
simvastatin, MSD had also held an earlier SPC in Germany on the very same basic
patent EP 1 720 599 B1, which covered the mono-product of ezetimibe (tradename
EZETROL®), which expired in April 2018.
In May 2018 the District Court in Düsseldorf
granted MSD ex-parte preliminary injunctions against the generic companies.
Seven of these generic companies appealed
against the preliminary injunction granted by the District Court. It was argued
that the SPC-in-suit is invalid and was granted contrary to the requirements of
Art. 3 a), 3 c) and 3 d) SPC-Regulation.
With the decision of 1 October, 2018, these seven
injunctions have now been lifted. According to the District Court’s assessment,
the validity of SPC DE 12 2004 000 026.1 is not sufficiently secured and the
SPC is expected to be invalidated.
In the District Court’s opinion, the
requirements of Art. 3 a) SPC-Regulation were fulfilled for the combination product
in question, since the combination of ezetimibe and simvastatin was mentioned
in the claims as well as in the specification of the basic patent. Further, the
skilled person would have known from the prior art that simvastatin would also
be a suitable drug for reduction of cholesterol. Based on the fact that
ezetimibe and simvastatin would act via a different mechanisms of action, the
skilled person would expect achieving an additive effect with the
administration of the two active ingredients.
However, the District Court concluded that
the requirements of Art. 3 c) SPC-Regulations were not fulfilled for the
product-in-suit.
Contrary to MSD’s submission, ezetimibe would
be the sole subject matter of the invention protected in the basic patent in an
SPC specific meaning. The combination of ezetimibe and simvastatin would not be
the core of the technical teaching of the basic patent and should therefore not
be awarded a separate SPC.
The Court made clear that according to
their interpretation of the CJEU’s case law, an SPC should be granted for
compensating for the duration of the authorization procedure but not for the
effort/cost associated with the authorization procedure. Moreover, the
extension of protection should only be granted once for a product which may be
understood as an active ingredient or combination of active ingredients in the
narrower meaning. This approach may lead to situations wherein a combination of
active ingredients is in fact considered to be protected in the meaning of Art.
3 a) SPC-Regulaiton, but in view of Art. 3 c) SPC-Regulation there should
only be awarded an SPC if a product represents the core inventive advance of
the basic patent at its priority date.
This requirement was considered not to be fulfilled
in the present case since the combination of ezetimibe and simvastatin is not
the core inventive advance of the basic patent, but only ezetimibe. According
to the District Court, the technical contribution for which the SPC should be
rewarded must represent the actual technical teaching of the basic patent. In
particular for combination preparations, the combination must address a
specific problem in the treatment, prevention or diagnosis of a disease, for
which the technical solution must be different from the solution provided by
the mono product.In the District Court’s opinion not only a
synergism of the two actives would qualify for such a different effect but also
a reduction of side effects or the like, under the condition that this effect
is different from the one observed for the mono-product. However, for the
difference relied upon, there must be disclosure in the basic patent at the
priority date. Referring to the recent decision C-121/17 – Teva, the District
Court stated that it is not sufficient that such differences or effects were
only revealed during the authorization procedure. In such a case the aim of the
Regulation, namely to compensate for the duration of the authorization
procedure would not be fulfilled.
The District Court further stated that also
the other effects relied upon by the Claimant were not disclosed in the basic
patent and have been classified as “surprising” by the Claimant itself. It
is therefore apparent, that the effect relied upon by the Claimant are based on
additional insight gained only during the authorization procedure, but are not
disclosed in the basic patent.
Moreover, in the Court’s view the fact that
the majority of the relevant clinical studies for the marketing authorization
of the combination product were already conducted for the authorization of the
mono-product aggrevates the situation. Only marginal additional data on the
effectiveness were provided with the marketing authorization for the
combination product, which, however, did not provide any additional gain in knowledge
in view of the data contained in the earlier authorization of the mono-product
Ezetrol®.
According to the District Court, the mere fact
that the combination is provided as a “fixed dose” cannot chance the situation,
since it was known to the skilled person at the priority date that patient
compliance is improved by fixed dose preparations. In addition, there is no
indication that the provision of the fixed dose preparation was associated with
any difficulties for the skilled person.
Summarizing, the District Court found that the SPC was granted contravening the requirements of Art. 3 c)
SPC-Regulation and thus the validity of the SPC is not secured and therefore
the preliminary injunctions had to be revoked."
MSD has filed an appeal against the first instance decision.
Many thanks to Derk Vos and Philip Rektorschek!