메모

09. December 2011
European Patent Law
In its recent decision, T 1635/09 (OJ EPO 542, 2011),
Technical Board of Appeal 3.3.02 of the European Patent Office (EPO) has
commented on the second medical use of a medicament under the European
Patent Convention (EPC). The decision was made in the appeal proceedings
of an opposition concerning a compound for oral contraception
containing a minimized concentration of hormones.
In general, a
method comprising the step of administering a contraceptive to a human
being is not regarded as a method of treatment by the EPO, since
pregnancy is not a disease. In the decided case, a use of a composition
as an oral contraceptive has been claimed, wherein the concentrations of
hormones were selected at such low levels that the likely pathological
side-effects could be prevented or reduced. Due to the reduction of
unwanted side-effects, the claimed use was regarded as having a
therapeutic effect. Accordingly, the Technical Board of Appeal
considered the claimed use to be a therapeutic method excluded from
patentability under Article 53(c) EPC.
As outlined in decision G
1/03 of the Enlarged Board of Appeal, an undisclosed disclaimer may be
introduced to disclaim non-patentable subject matter, such as subject
matter contravening Article 53(c) EPC. In the present case however, it
has been ruled that the introduction of a disclaimer rendering the
claimed use “non-therapeutic” contravenes Article 84 EPC. In particular,
the Board held that in the claimed use a non-therapeutic use in the
form of a contraceptive is inseparably associated with a therapeutic use
in the form of the prevention or reduction of pathological
side-effects, which cannot be removed by limiting the claim to a
"non-therapeutic use".
During the oral proceedings the Technical
Board of Appeal decided on the sufficiency of disclosure of a
contraceptive, wherein the concentration of a particular hormone was
defined as being equivalent to a particular amount of another hormone.
It was decided that this definition is vague and a person skilled in the
art would need a series of tests to determine the exact concentration
of the hormone. The decision indicates that time-consuming and ethically
questionable tests are unreasonable if the claimed invention could have
been defined, without any limitation of its scope, by features which
would have rendered such a series of tests superfluous for the purpose
of reproducibility by the skilled person.
Since no protection for
the above use of a composition as an oral contraceptive could be
obtained, the patent proprietor reformulated the claim as a second
medical use. However, the Technical Board of Appeal was of the opinion
that a reformulation of the claim as a Swiss-type claim contravenes
Article 123(3) EPC. In particular, the Technical Board of Appeal stated
that the Swiss-type claim is considered to be a process of manufacture.
Since a process of manufacture also provides protection for the
resulting product per se, the scope of protection is broadened if the
claimed use as granted is reformulated as a Swiss-type claim.
Regarding
the formulation as a second medical use according to Article 54(5) EPC,
the Technical Board of Appeal decided that this would be inadmissible,
since the patent had been granted before the EPC2000 entered into force.
Nevertheless, the decision indicates that a reformulation as a
purpose-related product claim would broaden the scope of protection of
the patent as granted, since such a claim would be directed to the
actual product. Thus, the Technical Board of Appeal concluded that the
conversion of a claim for the use of a substance or composition for a
specific purpose into a Swiss-type claim or a purpose-related product
claim within the meaning of Article 54(5) EPC would result in an
extension of protection.
The finding of the Technical Boards of
Appeal is at odds with jurisprudence of the Federal High Court of
Germany, which has explicitly outlined in its decision, “Trigonellin” (X
ZR 177/98), that the scope of protection conferred by a second medical
use claim corresponds to the scope of protection of a normal use claim.
Download the full text Decision of Technical Board of Appeal under:
http://www.mueller-bore.de/tl_files/Decisions_EPO/Decision_of_Technical_Board_of_Appeal.pdf
Should you have any questions, please feel free to contact lenhard@mueller-bore.de.
download Pdf