Rx IP Update

IN THIS ISSUE:

Ontario Court dismisses Eli Lilly’s motion to strike Apotex’s claim for damages under almost 400-year-old Statute of Monopolies »

Court dismisses Eli Lilly’s prohibition application for Apotex’s generic versions of CIALIS and ADCIRCA, states disclosure in patent not required to demonstrate utility »

Health Canada lifts import ban against Apotex Inc. products from India »

Updates to the Guidance Document: Post-Notice of Compliance (NOC) Changes: Safety and Efficacy to reflect Plain Language Labelling Regulations »

Patented Medicine Prices Review Board releases NEWSletter »

Recent Court decisions »

Federal Court rules that assertion of different claims for the same patent in subsequent PM(NOC) proceedings is abuse of process »

Takeda’s application for an Order of prohibition re: pantoprazole dismissed »

New Court proceedings »

Ontario Court dismisses Eli Lilly’s motion to strike Apotex’s claim for damages under almost 400-year-old Statute of Monopolies

by Urszula Wojtyra »

On August 28, 2015, the Ontario Superior Court of Justice dismissed Eli Lilly’s motion to strike Apotex’s claim for treble damages and double costs pursuant to the almost 400-year old British Statute of Monopolies and its 118-year-old Ontario re-enactment (collectively, “the Monopolies Acts”): Apotex Inc v Eli Lilly and Company, 2015 ONSC 5396. Apotex claims damages under the Monopolies Acts alongside damages pursuant to section 8 of the Patented Medicines (Notice of Compliance) Regulations (“PM(NOC) Regulations”) following the dismissal of Eli Lilly’s application for an Order of prohibition for Apotex’s generic atomoxetine product (Eli Lilly’s STRATTERA). Eli Lilly’s prohibition application was dismissed as moot, as previously reported when Apotex was issued a notice of compliance (NOC) after the patent at issue had been declared invalid in a separate impeachment action brought by Novopharm.

Read more »


Court dismisses Eli Lilly’s prohibition application for Apotex’s generic versions of CIALIS and ADCIRCA, states disclosure in patent not required to demonstrate utility

by Paul Jorgensen »

On September 11, 2015, the Federal Court dismissed Eli Lilly’s application for a prohibition Order against Apotex’s generic versions of CIALIS and ADCIRCA: Eli Lilly Canada Inc v Apotex Inc, 2015 FC 1016. Eli Lilly asserted Canadian Patent No. 2,379,948, which claims certain formulations of tadalafil. Justice Gleason determined that “in the rather unique circumstances of this case,” the application was not an abuse of process, even though Justice de Montigny had ruled earlier this year that Mylan’s allegation that the 948 patent was invalid for obviousness was justified: Eli Lilly Canada Inc v Mylan Pharmaceuticals ULC, 2015 FC 178 (as reported here). The Court found that Eli Lilly would be severely prejudiced if the application against Apotex was dismissed and Eli Lilly later proved successful in its appeal of Justice de Montigny’s decision (which was unlikely to be dismissed for mootness). The Court noted that Apotex could have avoided the cost and inconvenience of the application by agreeing to a stay pending the appeal.

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Health Canada lifts import ban against Apotex Inc. products from India

Health Canada announced that the import ban against products manufactured in Apotex Inc.’s Indian facilities put in place in September 2014, as previously reported would be lifted on September 1, 2015, subject to several conditions, including requirement for testing at approved Canadian facilities and enhanced reporting requirements to Health Canada.

Health Canada Information Update


Updates to the Guidance Document: Post-Notice of Compliance (NOC) Changes: Safety and Efficacy to reflect Plain Language Labelling Regulations

As reported previously, on June 13, 2015, the Regulations Amending the Food and Drug (Labelling, Packaging and Brand Names of Drugs for Human Use) were registered (SOR/2014-158, Canada Gazette Part II). The amendments aim to improve the safe use of drugs by making labels and packaging easier to read and understand, and require the inclusion of a brand name assessment in all new drug submissions and Drug Identification Number applications where a new brand name is being proposed, or where a change to an existing brand name is being proposed. On August 26, 2015, Health Canada published consequential updates to its Post-Notice of Compliance (NOC) Changes: Safety and Efficacy Guidance Document.

Notice - Updates to the Guidance Document: Post-Notice of Compliance (NOC) Changes: Safety and Efficacy to reflect Plain Language Labelling Regulations


Patented Medicine Prices Review Board releases NEWSletter

The July 2015 NEWSletter has been released. It includes the schedule for the next Outreach sessions, staffing updates, and an explanation of updates on Compendium of Policies, Guidelines and Procedures.

Patented Medicine Prices Review Board July 2015 NEWSletter


Recent Court decisions

Patented Medicines (Notice of Compliance) Regulations

Federal Court rules that assertion of different claims for the same patent in subsequent PM(NOC) proceedings is abuse of process. Apotex brought a motion under s. 6(5)(b) of the PM(NOC) Regulations seeking to dismiss proceedings relating to Canadian Patent No. 2,298,059 for tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (Gilead’s VIREAD) as an abuse of process. The Court held that Gilead could not re-litigate the validity of the patent that was the subject of a previous PM(NOC) proceeding against Teva (2013 FC 1270 and 2013 FC 1272; as previously reported, in which Teva’s allegation of obviousness regarding claims 3 and 4 was successful. The Judge held that Gilead was bound by its decision to assert only claims 3 and 4 in the first proceeding, and its subsequent attempt to assert the validity of all of the claims was an abuse of process since it had “effectively conceded” those claims. The Court reiterated that a patentee must put its strongest case forward in the first instance, and that a patentee’s assertion of different claims against different generic challengers would amount to splitting its case.

Gilead Sciences, Inc v Canada (Health), 2015 FC 610

Takeda’s application for an Order of prohibition re: pantoprazole dismissed. On June 15, 2015, Justice Barnes dismissed Takeda’s prohibition application regarding Mylan’s pantoprazole magnesium dihydrate product (Takeda’s TECTA). Claim 1 of Canadian Patent No. 2,341,031, which was construed to claim dihydrate forms of pantoprazole magnesium, was at issue. Justice Barnes found that Takeda had failed to refute Mylan’s allegations of anticipation and non-infringement. In relation to anticipation, he found that Takeda had not shown that following Example 10 of a prior patent application did not inevitably produce pantoprazole magnesium dihydrate. In relation to non-infringement, Justice Barnes found that Takeda had not met its burden of establishing that the Mylan product infringes, considering Mylan’s evidence that its product was the hemipentahydrate rather than the dihydrate form of pantoprazole magnesium.

Takeda Canada Inc v Minister of Health and Mylan Pharmaceuticals ULC, 2015 FC 751


New Court proceedings

Patented Medicines (Notice of Compliance) Regulations

Medicine:

desvenlafaxine (PRISTIQ)

Applicants:

Pfizer Canada Inc and Wyeth LLC

Respondents:

Teva Canada Limited and Minister of Health

Date Commenced:

August 24, 2015

Court File No.:

T-1399-15

Comment:

Application for Order of prohibition until expiry of Patent No. 2,436,668. Teva alleges non-infringement and invalidity.

Medicine:

infliximab (REMICADE)

Applicants:

Janssen Inc

Respondents:

Celltrion Healthcare Co., Ltd and Minister of Health

Respondent Patentee:

The Kennedy Trust for Rheumatology Research

Date Commenced:

September 2, 2015

Court File No.:

T-1478-15

Comment:

Application for Order of prohibition until expiry of Patent No. 2,261,630. Celltrion alleges non-infringement.

Medicine:

pemetrexed disodium (ALIMTA)

Plaintiff:

Eli Lilly Canada Inc

Respondent:

Teva Canada Limited, Minister of Health and Attorney General of Canada

Respondent Patentees:

Eli Lilly and Company; Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Limited

Date Commenced:

September 4, 2015

Court File No.:

T-1502-15

Comment:

Application for Order of prohibition until expiry of Patents Nos. 1,340,794 and 2,400,155. Teva alleges invalidity of the 794 patent and invalidity and non-infringement of the 155 patent. Teva had served and later withdrew a March 11, 2011 NOA also alleging invalidity of the 794 patent and invalidity and non-infringement of the 155 patent; the Court determined Eli Lilly’s earlier prohibition application was therefore moot. Eli Lilly seeks further relief in the present application including a Declaration that the Minister cannot act upon the second NOA.

Other proceedings

Medicine:

unidentified

Plaintiffs:

Apotex Inc

Defendant:

Minister of Health and Attorney General of Canada

Date Commenced:

September 8, 2015

Court File No.:

T-1511-15

Comment:

Application for judicial review of the Minister’s decision to release certain records relating to an Apotex ANDS in response to a request received by Health Canada pursuant to the Access to Information Act.

Medicine:

rogesterone (PROMETRIUM, Apo-Progesterone)

Plaintiff:

Apotex Inc

Defendant:

Minister of Health and Attorney General of Canada

Date Commenced:

September 8, 2015

Court File No.:

T-1516-15

Comment:

Application for judicial review of the Minister’s decision not to issue an NOC for Apotex’s Apo-Progesterone product. Health Canada rejected the submission as the proposed limit for an excipient, sodium lauryl sulfate, was not considered qualified.

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

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RANKINGS AND RECOGNITIONS

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
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Smart & Biggar honoured with two prestigious awards at the inaugural LMG Life Sciences Awards
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Smart & Biggar/ Fetherstonhaugh tops the Canadian rankings in the LMG Life Sciences 2013
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Smart & Biggar/ Fetherstonhaugh achieves dominant results in 2013 iam Patent 1000 — The World's Leading Patent Practitioners
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Smart & Biggar/ Fetherstonhaugh leads all Canadian firms in The International Who's Who of Patent Lawyers 2013
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Smart & Biggar chosen for the third year in a row as the Best Canadian IP Firm at The International Legal Alliance Summit & Awards
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Smart & Biggar/ Fetherstonhaugh is proud to have been recognized with the Canadian Trademark Milestone Case of the Year award by Managing Intellectual Property (MIP)
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Smart & Biggar tops the rankings in Chambers Global — The World's Leading Lawyers for Business – "A heavyweight in the Canadian market"
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Smart & Biggar/ Fetherstonhaugh repeats Top Tier ranking in Managing Intellectual Property's World IP Survey
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Three Smart & Biggar partners featured in the 2012 Lexpert® Guide to the Leading US/Canada Cross-border Litigation Lawyers in Canada
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Gunars A. Gaikis and François Guay named among Canada's Leading Litigation Lawyers
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Firm recognized in The International Who's Who of Life Sciences Lawyers 2013
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Smart & Biggar/ Fetherstonhaugh recognized in Euromoney's Guide to the World's Leading Patent Law Practitioners
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Smart & Biggar/ Fetherstonhaugh achieves top ranking in The Lexpert®/American Lawyer Guide to the Leading 500 Lawyers in Canada
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Smart & Biggar/ Fetherstonhaugh dominates in Who's Who Legal: Canada 2012
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Smart & Biggar/ Fetherstonhaugh named a leading firm in the 2012 edition of the PLC Cross-border Life Sciences Handbook
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Congratulations to our 20 lawyers recognized in the 2014 edition of The Best Lawyers in Canada®
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Gunars A. Gaikis, J. Christopher Robinson and Steven B. Garland named "Lawyers of the Year" by Best Lawyers
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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
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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

 
Urszula Wojtyra

 
Paul Jorgensen

 

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

 

 

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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.

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