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England and Wales High Court (Patents Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Patents Court) Decisions >> Hospira UK Ltd v Genentech Inc [2015] EWHC 1796 (Pat) (24 June 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Patents/2015/1796.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 1796 (Pat) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
PATENTS COURT
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NLL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
HOSPIRA UK LIMITED |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
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GENENTECH INC |
Defendant |
____________________
Michael Tappin QC and Mark Chacksfield (instructed by Marks & Clerk Solicitors LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 8-10, 12 June 2015
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE ARNOLD :
Contents
Topic | Paras |
Introduction | 1-8 |
The witnesses | 9-16 |
The Patent | 17-26 |
The claims | 27-28 |
The skilled person | 29-31 |
Common general knowledge | 32-50 |
Antibody therapies in general | 35 |
HER2 overexpression and HER2 as an antibody target | 36 |
Combination therapy | 37 |
Mouse xenograft models | 38-40 |
Phase I, II and III trials | 41 |
Clinical endpoints | 47 |
Response rates | 49 |
The success rate in drug development generally | 50 |
Construction | 51-59 |
Baselga 97 | 60-80 |
HER2/c-erbB-2/neu in Breast Cancer | 62 |
Role of Monoclonal antibodies | 63 |
HER2 Overexpression as a Predictor of | 64 |
Response to Taxanes | |
Dose-Response Effects to Anthracyclines | 65 |
HER2 Overexpression and Taxane Sensitivity | 66 |
Tentative Results With Polyclonal Antibody | 67 |
Paclitaxel and the Signal Transduction Pathway | 68-69 |
Combined Therapy with Anti-HER2 Agents | |
and Chemotherapy | 70-72 |
A "Humanised" Antibody | 73 |
Anti-HER MoAb Combined With Chemotherapy | 74 |
Paclitaxel/Doxorubicin/rhuMoAb HER2 Regimen | 75 |
Cisplatin/rhuMoAb HER2 Therapy | 76 |
Phase III Study of rhuMoAB HER2 | 77-78 |
Combined With Chemo | |
Future Directions | 79 |
Conclusions | 80 |
Novelty | 81-104 |
The law | 81-93 |
Assessment | 94-98 |
The decision of the Board of Appeal concerning the Patent | 99-104 |
Obviousness | 105-134 |
The law | 105-115 |
Assessment | 116-134 |
Would the trial be burdensome | 120 |
Would the trial present a risk to patients? | 121 |
What alternative options were there? | 122 |
The scientific context | 123 |
No lions in the path | 124 |
Failure rates in Phase III trials | 125 |
How would the skilled person view the results reported in Baselga 97? | 126-131 |
Secondary evidence | 132-133 |
Conclusion | 134 |
Conclusion | 135 |
Introduction
The witnesses
The Patent
"The present invention concerns the treatment of disorders characterised by overexpression of ErbB2, and is based on the recognition that while treatment with anti-ErbB2 antibodies markedly enhances the clinical benefit of the use of chemotherapeutic agents in general, a syndrome of myocardial dysfunction that has been observed as a side-effect of anthracycline derivatives is increased by the administration of anti-ErbB2 antibodies."
[Diagram or picture not reproduced in HTML version - see original .rtf file to view diagram or picture]
i) Taking the two chemotherapy groups together, the addition of Herceptin extended TTP by 3.1 months to 8.6 months and the response rate by 25.8% to 62%. The p-values indicate that the increases were statistically significant.
ii) Looking at each of the chemotherapy groups separately, again there are increases in both TTP and response rates as a result of the addition of Herceptin. In the AC group, TTP was increased from 6.5 months to 9.0 months and response rate from 42.1% to 64.9%. In the paclitaxel group, TTP was increased from 4.2 months to 7.1 months (a 70% increase) and response rate from 25% to 57.3% (a 130% increase).
"These data indicate that the combination of anti-ErbB2 antibody treatment with chemotherapy markedly increases the clinical benefit, as assessed by response rates and the evaluation of disease progression. However, due to the increased cardiac side-effects of doxorubicin or epirubicin, the combined use of anthracyclines with anti-ErbB2 antibody therapy is contraindicated. The results, taking into account risk and benefit, favor the combined treatment with HERCEPTINฎ and paclitaxel (TAXOLฎ)."
The claims
"[1] Use of an anti-ErbB2 antibody in the preparation of a medicament
[2] for treatment to provide clinical benefit as measured by increased time to disease progression of malignant breast cancer characterised by overexpression of ErbB2 in a human patient,
[3] wherein said antibody binds to epitope 4D5 within the ErbB2 extracellular domain sequence as determined by a cross-blocking assay using said antibody and antibody 4D5 obtainable from deposit ATCC CRL 10463,
[4] and wherein the method comprises combined administration of the antibody with a chemotherapeutic agent which is a taxoid and not in combination with an anthracycline derivative,
[5] wherein the combined administration has:
[a] clinical efficacy as measured by determining time to disease progression and
[b] reduced myocardial dysfunction compared with combined administration of the antibody and anthracycline derivatives."
The skilled person
Common general knowledge
Taxanes
Antibody therapies in general
HER2 overexpression and HER2 as an antibody target
i) it would allow a new way to target the disease;
ii) HER2-positive patients were in particular need of new treatment; and
iii) it would involve lower toxicity than traditional chemotherapy since HER2 was only expressed at low levels in normal (epithelial) cells.
Combination therapy
Mouse xenograft models
Phase I, II and III trials
Clinical endpoints
"(a) Overall survival (OS) the percentage of patients alive at a defined time after initiation of the treatment, often reported as a five year survival rate;
(b) Progression free survival (PFS) the proportion of patients who continue to live with a disease that is not getting worse;
(c) Time to disease progression (TTP) time from diagnosis or start of treatment until tumour progression, not including death; and
(d) Response rate (RR) measures tumour size to give an indication of whether the tumour is responding to a treatment, which includes:
(i) Complete response (CR) disappearance of all clinical evidence of disease;
(ii) Partial response (PR) at least a 50% reduction in two perpendicular dimensions of the size of all measurable tumours;
(iii) Stable disease (SD) tumour size remains the same or which increases/shrinks by less than 20-25% to take into account measurement errors and/or insignificant changes; and
(iv) Progressive disease (PD) proportion of patients with a greater than 25% increase in tumour size relative to the smallest measured size of the tumour."
Response rates
The success rate in drug development generally
Construction
Baselga 97
"An area of increasing interest in clinical research on taxanes is the possible role of oncogenes, such as HER2, in determining clinical response to paclitaxel. Studies have examined whether strategies can be designed to increase the agent's efficacy (or curb resistance to it) in breast cancers that overexpress HER2. Available data that will be presented in this review suggest that HER2 overexpression may influence the response to paclitaxel in patients with metastatic breast cancer and that anti-HER2 monoclonal antibodies significantly increase the antitumour activity of paclitaxel in vitro and in vivo."
HER2/c-erbB-2/neu in Breast Cancer
" findings from the CALGB study suggest that there is a significant dose-response effect of adjuvant therapy with an anthracycline-containing regimen in patients with HER2 overexpression but not in patients with no or minimal HER2 expression. The group's final conclusion was that HER2 overexpression may be a useful marker for identifying patients who are most likely to benefit from high doses of adjuvant doxorubicin-based chemotherapy."
"Thus, despite a positive correlation of HER2 expression and poor prognostic features, the odds of HER2-positive patients responding clinically to taxanes were greater than three times those of HER2-negative patients."
"The possible mechanisms underlying the interaction between HER2 overexpression and taxane sensitivity are unknown. Paclitaxel stabilizes microtubules, prevents tubulin depolymerization, and promotes tubulin bundling. In addition to this well-documented mechanism of action, some evidence suggests that paclitaxel activates key elements of the HER2 signal transduction pathway ."
"The activation of the HER2 signal transduction pathway by paclitaxel could also result in activation of paclitaxel-induced apoptosis. [31] Thus, HER2 overexpression would provide an increased opportunity to enhance the cytotoxic effects of paclitaxel."
Combined Therapy with Anti-HER2 Agents and Chemotherapy
"As already mentioned, p185HER2 represents a potential target for tumors that overexpress HER2. A novel approach that is currently being explored is the combined use of therapies directed at p185HER2, such as MoAbs given alone or in combination with conventional chemotherapeutic agents, including paclitaxel."
"In extensive studies conducted at Genentech, Inc, a clear relationship between the level of HER2 proto-oncogene expression and sensitivity to the growth-inhibitory effects of the antibodies was observed. [20,21,34]"
"Toxicity was minimal, and no antibodies against rhuMoAb HER2 were detected in any patient. Objective responses were seen in 5 of the 43 evaluable patients: 1 complete remission and 4 partial remissions (overall response rate, 11.6%; 95% CI, 4.36% to 25.9%) Responses were observed in liver, mediastinum, lymph nodes, and chest wall lesions. Minor responses, seen in 2 patients, and stable disease, occurring in 14 patients, lasted for a median of 5.1 months. One patient is still in pathologically confirmed complete remission 72 months after starting therapy.
Thus, rhuMoAb HER2 is clinically active in patients who have metastatic breast cancers that overexpress HER2 and have received extensive prior therapy. A confirmatory study that will include 200 patients with less heavily pretreated metastatic disease is currently underway."
The reference given for this work, reference [39], is Baselga 96. The reader who pursued the reference would find that it supported the summary given in Baselga 97.
"Slamon, in studies using MoAb 4D5, has demonstrated that 4D5 enhances sensitivity to cisplatin in cisplatin-resistant ovarian carcinoma cell lines. A possible mechanism is 4D5's interference with the repair of cisplatin-induced DNA damage, thus promoting cisplatin cytotoxicity.[36]"
"Therapy with MoAb 4D5 alone produced a 35% growth inhibition, and paclitaxel alone resulted in a 35% growth inhibition when compared with animals treated with a control MoAb. The treatment with paclitaxel plus 4D5 resulted in major antitumor activity, with 93% inhibition of growth. This result was markedly better than an equipotent dose of doxorubicin (10 mg/kg IP) and 4D5 (70% inhibition). In addition, paclitaxel combined with 4D5 resulted in the disappearance of well-established xenografts.[37]"
Reference 37 is an abstract by Baselga et al which appears to be equivalent to Baselga 94.
"In this group of patients with expected cisplatin resistance, the observed response rate to the combined therapy was 25%, suggesting that the synergy observed in the laboratory was reproducible in the clinic. In addition, the combined therapy was no more toxic than cisplatin alone."
"Results from the phase II studies and the activity of rhuMoAb HER2 against xenografts when given in combination with doxorubicin and paclitaxel have been encouraging. These positive results have led to the design of a phase III multinational study of chemotherapy in combination with rhuMoAb HER2 in patients with HER2-overexpressing breast tumors who have not received prior chemotherapy for metastatic disease (Figure 2)."
Future Directions
"It is likely that these agents may be able to increase the antitumour activity of paclitaxel in a similar fashion to that observed with anti-HER2 antibodies."
Conclusions
"The predictive value of HER2 overexpression for paclitaxel response requires independent confirmation in advanced disease and early breast cancer. This question could be addressed in ongoing studies of paclitaxel-based adjuvant therapy in breast cancer. In preclinical models, the combined therapy of breast cancer cells that overexpress HER2 with agents that interfere with HER2 function and paclitaxel results in a marked antitumor effect. One such strategy, the combination of anti-HER2 MoAb with paclitaxel, is currently being evaluated. If the results of these studies are positive, we might be faced with a novel paradox, in which expression of a receptor that confers a worse prognosis provides us with an opportunity for increased response to taxanes."
Novelty
The law
" such claims are generally regarded as novel over a mere proposal to administer the drug to patients in the manner claimed. That is because the mere proposal does not disclose that the treatment is indeed efficacious."
"22. If I may summarise the effects of those two well-known statements, the matter relied upon as prior art must disclose subject-matter which, if performed, would necessarily result in an infringement of the patent. That may be because the prior art discloses the same invention. In that case, there will be no question that performance of the earlier invention would infringe and usually it will be apparent to someone who is aware of both the prior art and the patent that it will do so. But patent infringement does not require that one should be aware that one is infringing: 'whether or not a person is working [an] invention is an objective fact independent of what he knows or thinks about what he is doing': Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals Inc v H N Norton & Co Ltd [1996] RPC 76, 90. It follows that, whether or not it would be apparent to anyone at the time, whenever subject-matter described in the prior disclosure is capable of being performed and is such that, if performed, it must result in the patent being infringed, the disclosure condition is satisfied. ...
23. Thus, in Merrell Dow, the ingestion of terfenadine by hay-fever sufferers, which was the subject of prior disclosure, necessarily entailed the making of the patented acid metabolite in their livers. It was therefore an anticipation of the acid metabolite, even though no one was aware that it was being made or even that it existed. But the infringement must be not merely a possible or even likely consequence of performing the invention disclosed by the prior disclosure. It must be necessarily entailed.
24. Although it is sometimes said that there are two forms of anticipatory disclosure: a disclosure of the patented invention itself and a disclosure of an invention which, if performed, would necessarily infringe the patented invention (see, for example, Laddie J. in Inhale Therapeutic Systems Inc v Quadrant Healthcare Plc [2002] R.P.C. 21 at [43]) they are both aspects of a single principle, namely that anticipation requires prior disclosure of subject-matter which, when performed, must necessarily infringe the patented invention."
" a gap has opened between the tests for infringement and anticipation. Acts done secretly or without knowledge of the relevant facts, which would amount to infringements after the grant of the patent, will not count as anticipations before."
"(The position may be different when the invention is a use for a product; in such a case, a person may only be working the invention when he is using it for the patented purpose: see the discussion of the MOBIL/Friction reducing additive case in the next section.)"
"The Enlarged Board said :
' under Article 54(2) EPC the question to be decided is what has been "made available" to the public: the question is not what may have been "inherent" in what was made available (by a prior written description, or in what has previously been used (prior use), for example). Under the EPC, a hidden or secret use, because it has not been made available to the public, is not a ground of objection to [the] validity of a European patent.'
My Lords, I do not think that this principle is in issue in this appeal. I have accepted it fully in the discussion of anticipation by use ... It was applied by the Technical Board of Appeal to the facts of MOBIL/Friction reducing additive when that case went back to the Technical Board of Appeal after the decision in principle by the Enlarged Board: see [1990] E.P.O.R. 514. The Technical Board decided that so far as friction reduction had been an inevitable concomitant of the use of the additive for other purposes, it was a case of uninformative use like Bristol-Myers Co. (Johnson's) Application. Or to put the same thing in another way, a description of the product by its chemical composition or as 'something in the lubricating oil which inhibits rust formation' or any other of the descriptions under which it was previously known would not enable anyone to use it for the purpose of reducing friction, even though this would be the inevitable consequence of doing so. It did not therefore prevent the invention in the form sanctioned by the Enlarged Board from being novel."
"121. Thus the skilled person would understand that the technical subject matter of the claim was concerned with the ultimate end use of the medicament, from which it derived its novelty. The therapeutic treatment is of course new because, and only because, it is carried out with the intention of producing the new therapeutic effect. The prior use of the compound may have in fact produced the effect ... This demonstrates, to my mind, that it is the intention for which the compound is administered which is at the heart of the invention.
124. If a product is 'for' a particular therapeutic indication if it is reasonably foreseeable that it will be used intentionally for the treatment of pain, then it will not be rendered lacking in novelty by showing that products in the prior art had been manufactured in circumstances when it was not possible to foresee such a result.
125. Mr Speck [argued] that no-one should be prevented by the grant of a patent from doing that which they did, or could have done, before. He called this the 'golden thread' of English patent law. That principle is not, however, an entirely reliable one. It was relied on in Merrell Dow (supra) to suggest that the patent was invalid because it would have the effect of restraining the continuance of the prior use. The principle was ineffective there because the old use itself was 'uninformative'. At pages 86-87 Lord Hoffmann recognised that a gap had opened up under the 1977 Act between anticipation and infringement. The present case is another situation in which one cannot rely on the principle, because the subject matter of the invention is concerned with the purpose of acts which are in themselves no different from those which were done before. In any case it is not correct that the patent can prevent that which was done before. It was not possible before the patent was granted to foresee that the product would intentionally be used for treating pain."
Assessment
i) The sub-section headed "HER2 Overexpression and Taxane Sensitivity", particularly the finding that "65.2% of [metastatic breast cancer] patients with HER2-positive tumors responded" to taxanes (see paragraph 66 above).
ii) The description of the Phase II trial of trastuzumab as a single agent, particularly the statement that toxicity was minimal and the conclusion that trastuzumab "is clinically active in patients who have metastatic breast cancers that overexpress HER2 and have received extensive prior therapy" (see paragraph 73 above).
iii) The statement that "treatment with paclitaxel plus [MoAb] 4D5 resulted in major antitumor activity, with 93% growth inhibition" in xenograft tests, compared with 35% inhibition when either of the agents (paclitaxel or MoAb 4D5) were used alone (see paragraph 75 above).
The decision of the Board of Appeal concerning the Patent
" the intended medical use is the provision of a clinical benefit as measured by increased time to disease progression of malignant breast cancer characterised by overexpression of ErbB2 in a human patient, and wherein the method comprises combined administration of an anti-ErbB2 antibody with a taxoid to a human patient.
For the purpose of assessing novelty, it thus has to be examined whether or not the same therapeutic effect is directly and unambiguously derivable from a prior art document, upon using the same combination therapy in a human patient."
"However, a mere statement that a combination therapy is being explored does not amount to a novelty-destroying disclosure of what is claimed in claim 1, because claim 1 is a medical use claim which includes, as a technical feature of the claim, the achievement of a clinical benefit in breast cancer patients as measured by an increased time to disease progression.
The present 'currently being explored' situation, where no clinical benefit is disclosed, falls within the rationale of decisions T 158/96 and T 715/03. According to those decisions, if a prior art document discloses clinical investigations such as phase I, II or III studies (or states that these investigations are ongoing), but the document fails to disclose the final result of these studies, this document is not novelty-destroying.
The examining division argued that by applying the combined therapy of D1, one would inherently come to the claimed effect, which could not render a known therapy novel.
However, decision G/88 point 10.1 states: 'Under Article 54(2) the question to be decided is what has been "made available" to the public: the question is not what may have been "inherent" in what was made available'. Therefore, while it may be true that the claimed effect is inherent once applying the claimed therapy, the decisive question to be answered by the board remains whether or not this effect was a 'hidden' one or was accessible to the skilled person before the priority date."
"As for the planned or ongoing phase III clinical trial, it cannot be derived directly and unambiguously from these trials that a therapeutic effect is obtained, let alone one translating into an increased time to disease progression.
Moreover, since document D1 fails to disclose any encouraging phase II trial using an anti-ErbB2 antibody in combination with a taxoid, the rationale of decisions T 158/96 and T 715/03 applies also to the planned phase III clinical trial which is not novelty-destroying for claims 1 and 10."
Obviousness
The law
"(1)(a) Identify the notional 'person skilled in the art';
(b) Identify the relevant common general knowledge of that person;
(2) Identify the inventive concept of the claim in question or if that cannot readily be done, construe it;
(3) Identify what, if any, differences exist between the matter cited as forming part of the 'state of the art' and the inventive concept of the claim or the claim as construed;
(4) Viewed without any knowledge of the alleged invention as claimed, do those differences constitute steps which would have been obvious to the person skilled in the art or do they require any degree of invention?"
"90. One of the matters which it may be appropriate to take into account is whether it was obvious to try a particular route to an improved product or process. There may be no certainty of success but the skilled person might nevertheless assess the prospects of success as being sufficient to warrant a trial. In some circumstances this may be sufficient to render an invention obvious. On the other hand, there are areas of technology such as pharmaceuticals and biotechnology which are heavily dependent on research, and where workers are faced with many possible avenues to explore but have little idea if any one of them will prove fruitful. Nevertheless they do pursue them in the hope that they will find new and useful products. They plainly would not carry out this work if the prospects of success were so low as not to make them worthwhile. But denial of patent protection in all such cases would act as a significant deterrent to research.
91. For these reasons, the judgments of the courts in England and Wales and of the Boards of Appeal of the EPO often reveal an enquiry by the tribunal into whether it was obvious to pursue a particular approach with a reasonable or fair expectation of success as opposed to a hope to succeed. Whether a route has a reasonable or fair prospect of success will depend upon all the circumstances including an ability rationally to predict a successful outcome, how long the project may take, the extent to which the field is unexplored, the complexity or otherwise of any necessary experiments, whether such experiments can be performed by routine means and whether the skilled person will have to make a series of correct decisions along the way. Lord Hoffmann summarised the position in this way in Conor at [42]:
'In the Court of Appeal, Jacob LJ dealt comprehensively with the question of when an invention could be considered obvious on the ground that it was obvious to try. He correctly summarised the authorities, starting with the judgment of Diplock LJ in Johns-Manville Corporation's Patent [1967] RPC 479, by saying that the notion of something being obvious to try was useful only in a case where there was a fair expectation of success. How much of an expectation would be needed depended on the particular facts of the case.'
92. Moreover, whether a route is obvious to try is only one of many considerations which it may be appropriate for the court to take into account. In Generics (UK) Ltd v H Lundbeck, [2008] EWCA Civ 311, [2008] RPC 19, at [24] and in Conor [2008] UKHL 49, [2008] RPC 28 at [42], Lord Hoffmann approved this statement of principle which I made at first instance in Lundbeck:
'The question of obviousness must be considered on the facts of each case. The court must consider the weight to be attached to any particular factor in the light of all the relevant circumstances. These may include such matters as the motive to find a solution to the problem the patent addresses, the number and extent of the possible avenues of research, the effort involved in pursuing them and the expectation of success.'
93. Ultimately the court has to evaluate all the relevant circumstances in order to answer a single and relatively simple question of fact: was it obvious to the skilled but unimaginative addressee to make a product or carry out a process falling within the claim ."
"17. The alleged inventiveness lay in the claim that the product would have a particular property, namely, to prevent or treat restenosis. So the question of obviousness was whether it was obvious to use a taxol-coated stent for this purpose.
27. the teaching of the specification, so far as it supported claim 12, was that a taxol-coated stent would prevent or treat restenosis.
28. The question was whether that was obvious and not whether it was obvious that taxol (among many other products) might have this effect.
40. the correct question [was] whether it was obvious to use a taxol-coated stent to prevent restenosis."
"It is hard to see how the notion that something is worth trying or might have some effect can be described as an invention in respect of which anyone would be entitled to a monopoly. It is therefore perhaps not surprising that the test for obviousness which Pumfrey J. devised for such an 'invention' was whether it was obvious to try it without any expectation of success. This oxymoronic concept has, so far as I know, no precedent in the law of patents."
"40. In the event, therefore, neither the judge nor the Court of Appeal answered what I consider to have been the correct question, namely, whether it was obvious to use a taxol-coated stent to prevent restenosis. One can however, deduce the answer which Pumfrey J. would have given to this question from the way in which he formulated the issue which he had to decide. It was, at the end of the passage I have quoted:
'is the patent vulnerable only if it can be shown that the skilled person would have an expectation of success sufficient to induce him to incorporate taxol in a drug-eluting stent, or is it sufficient that without any expectation of success he would test or screen taxol?'
41. The judge answered this question in the second sense, from which I think it can be inferred that he would have rejected the attack on the patent if he had answered it in the first and in my opinion correct sense. "
"42. In the Court of Appeal, Jacob L.J. dealt comprehensively with the question of when an invention could be considered obvious on the ground that it was obvious to try. He correctly summarised the authorities, starting with the judgment of Diplock L.J. in Johns-Manville Corporation's Patent [1967] R.P.C. 479, by saying that the notion of something being obvious to try was useful only in a case in which there was a fair expectation of success. How much of an expectation would be needed depended upon the particular facts of the case. As Kitchin J. said in Generics (UK) Ltd v H Lundbeck A/S [2007] RPC 32 para.72:
'The question of obviousness must be considered on the facts of each case. The court must consider the weight to be attached to any particular factor in the light of all the relevant circumstances. These may include such matters as the motive to find a solution to the problem the patent addresses, the number and extent of the possible avenues of research, the effort involved in pursuing them and the expectation of success.'
43. But Jacob L.J. rejected this approach (at para.48) on the grounds that 'this is not an "obvious to try" case of the Johns-Manville type' because 'the patent has not in any way demonstrated that taxol actually works to prevent restenosis.' I agree with the Dutch court that patent law does not require such a demonstration. It was not a sufficient reason for not applying the ordinary principles of obviousness to the claimed invention. "
"This background helps to explain the question which the judge asked himself (at the end of para.61 of his judgment), including the reference to testing a product 'without any expectation of success' (which Lord Hoffmann refers to as an 'oxymoronic concept'). The judge sought to answer the question (para.62) by assessing the contribution to the art made by the specification, and decided (para.64) that the only real contribution was a proposal for testing (and no more). In this way arguments that would normally be regarded as relevant to insufficiency crept into a challenge on the ground of obviousness."
Assessment
"Results from the phase II studies and the activity of rhuMoAb HER2 against xenografts when given in combination with doxorubicin and paclitaxel have been encouraging. These positive results have led to the design of a phase III multinational study
In this ongoing study "
Thus Baselga 97 says that the results of the Phase II trials and the xenograft studies have been "positive" and "encouraging". Moreover, it says that these results have "led to" the design of the Phase III trial, which is "ongoing".
Conclusion