New medicines are usually protected by a patent covering the active molecule. These basic or primary patents usually provide robust protection for the relevant product, provided that the compound is genuinely new and inventive. Developers may be able to extend patent protection by patenting other technological advances related to the drug such as new formulations, dosage forms or regimens, and new combinations with other pharmaceuticals. These secondary patents can provide a significantly extended period of patent protection for the drug, provided of course that they are valid.
The same principles apply to the patenting of biological drugs (biologics). Biologics include large peptides and recombinant proteins such as insulin and growth hormone, monoclonal antibodies, recombinant DNA, antibody-drug conjugates, fusion proteins and synthetic vaccines. In contrast, small molecule drugs are usually chemically and thermally stable with low molecular weights.
Given the often significantly greater expense involved in the development of biologics (compared to small molecule drugs), and originator companies need to recoup that cost, it is unsurprising that secondary patents often play a key role in the lifecycles of biologics. As the basic patents on blockbuster biologics expire, there will be increasing interest in testing the strength of secondary patents, particularly from companies that produce biosimilars.
Patents for biologic and small molecule combinations
Secondary patents for drug therapy combinations can cover co-formulations (where the active ingredients are combined in a single product), combination products (such as dual-barrel syringes) and co-administration of different products simultaneously. For the purpose of this article, drug combinations are considered in their broadest sense, that of co-administration.
It is now common medical practice to use biologics in combination therapy, usually with a small molecule drug. But are the secondary patents to this kind of drug combination worthy of patent protection?
One reason why patents for biologic and small molecule combinations may not always be robust is because the co-administration of two or more medicines to treat disease is often a routine medical practice. In some fields, notably HIV medicine and oncology, monotherapy is unusual. This practice has transformed the efficacy of treatment of many diseases. As such, drug combinations which include at least one routinely used drug (often a small-molecule compound) are likely to be considered obvious from a patentability perspective, particularly where that drug is used in other combinations.
The approach of the European Patent Office (EPO)
Inventions are only entitled to patent protection if they are new and not obvious to a skilled person working in the relevant technical field. However, the approach of the EPO to the assessment of whether an invention for a combination of drugs is obvious tends to favour patent applicants. This is because the EPO does not, as a matter of routine, consider evidence on this question from relevant experts (although such evidence may be submitted by third parties opposing the grant of a patent). Rather, the EPOs analysis centres on whether the disclosure of earlier prior art documents would make the invention obvious. If an applicant is able to provide data to the EPO which demonstrates that a combination of drugs is particularly efficacious, a patent is often granted. This can be the case even if one of the drugs is already in routine use for the claimed medical indication. This is because, if one of the claimed drugs is relatively new, there are unlikely to be any prior art publications which disclose that the particular combination works.
Whether a combination is considered obvious may also depend on the medical field in which the compounds are used. In some specialities, routinely-used combinations tend to contain the same backbone drug, with variation only in the remainder of the combination.
As an example, combination therapies for rheumatoid arthritis commonly contain the antifolate drug methotrexate (MTX). Although biologics may only be prescribed when conventional disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs) have not worked, they are often administered in combination with MTX. Some, such as adalimumab and certolizumab pegol, are primarily licensed for combination use and only used alone in cases of intolerance to MTX.
In cancer care, combination chemotherapy is the gold-standard for many malignancies. This includes regimens using biologicals such as obinutuzumab (Gazyvaro) which is only licensed in the UK for combination chemotherapy, although it may be given on its own for subsequent maintenance therapy.
Similarly, pembrolizumab (Keytruda) is licensed for use with a number of longstanding chemotherapy drugs and, for some indications, with newer classes of chemotherapeutic agents such as the multi-receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors (for example, lenvatinib).
Obvious drug combinations: examples
Some major biologics have had secondary patents to combinations with small molecule drugs revoked in opposition proceedings before the EPO. One example is rituximab, a chimeric mouse/human monoclonal antibody for the CD20 protein found on the surface of B-lymphocytes that is marketed by Roche in Europe as MabThera and by Genentech in the US as Rituxan.
Rituximab was the first therapeutic antibody approved for oncology patients. It was first authorised in the US in November 1997 and in the EU in 1998 for a particular form of non-Hodgkins lymphoma (a type of blood cancer). Further approvals followed for other medical indications unrelated to cancer, as well as different treatment regimens and drug combinations.
Rituximab is now licensed to treat several autoimmune diseases and was approved in Europe in 2008 in combination with MTX to treat rheumatoid arthritis. A European patent granted to Genentech covering this indication was subsequently revoked in opposition proceedings after an appeal to the Technical Board of Appeal (TBA) of the EPO.
The TBA considered that the patent (EP1176981) was obvious because medical practice at the relevant time was to combine virtually all new agents with MTX. It therefore would have been obvious to combine a new biological agent such as rituximab with MTX. There was also an incentive for this to happen, given the urgent need for improved treatments for rheumatoid arthritis. As a result, the patent was not inventive and was revoked.
Another example is the combination of trastuzumab (the originator product Herceptin) and a taxoid to treat malignant HER2-positive breast cancer. Genentechs EP1037926, covering this indication, was revoked during opposition proceedings in the EPO on the basis that the invention was obvious. In those proceedings, the TBA summarised the approach of the EPO in considering obviousness as follows: a course of action can be considered obvious if the skilled person would have carried it out in expectation of some improvement or advantage. Thus, obviousness is not only present when results are clearly predictable but also when there is a reasonable expectation of success In the case of the trastuzumab combination, because monotherapy with the taxoid drug paclitaxel was a well-known treatment for breast cancer and the two drugs are directed at different molecular targets, the TBA considered that it would be obvious to combine them.
The approach of the UK courts
Despite these examples, it is likely that EPO will grant many more combination patents for biologics and small molecules where the patentee is able to provide evidence of an unexpected treatment benefit. The UK courts usually do not take the same approach to obviousness as the EPO, so these patents may be vulnerable to attack. Of particular importance is the role which experts play in invalidity proceedings in the UK, where their opinion can provide valuable context about common clinical practices at the relevant priority date. This is in contrast to the more limited, document-based review performed by the EPO.
It is, of course, possible that in certain medical fields where monotherapy is standard or at least common, drug combinations may be more likely to be considered genuinely inventive. However, combination therapy is, in principle, nothing new in medicine, leaving open the prospect of invalidity challenges to granted patents to many biologic-small molecule combinations.
Originally posted here:
Patents to biological medicines in combination: is two really better than one? - Lexology
- Growth hormone-releasing hormone and its analogues in health and disease - Nature.com - November 14th, 2024
- Growth Hormone Disorder Treatment Market: Projected Growth with a 9.11% CAGR in Forecast Period - openPR - October 29th, 2024
- How tall can girls with Turner syndrome grow by receiving growth hormone treatment? - KBR - October 21st, 2024
- Side effects of growth hormone injections surge - The Korea Herald - October 10th, 2024
- Insulin resistance reduction, intermittent fasting, and human growth hormone: secondary analysis of a randomized trial - Nature.com - October 10th, 2024
- What To Expect With Growth Hormone Therapy for Your Child - September 20th, 2024
- Skeptics challenge claims of Alzheimers disease transmission via growth hormone - The Transmitter: Neuroscience News and Perspectives - August 24th, 2024
- Growth Hormone - Actions - Regulation - TeachMephysiology - August 14th, 2024
- Alzheimers revelation: How the brain disease was spread between humans via a growth hormone given to children in the UK up until 1985 - The Olive... - February 2nd, 2024
- Normal Physiology of Growth Hormone in Adults - Endotext - NCBI Bookshelf - November 19th, 2023
- "I admired the effort he made to continue" - Lionel Messi's ex-teammate gives rare insight into PSG superstar's growth hormone treatment -... - April 21st, 2023
- Abdu Rozik witnesses a 'miraculous' growth in his height; learn all about growth hormone deficiency - Times of India - April 13th, 2023
- Growth Hormone Deficiency (GHD): Symptoms & Treatment - Cleveland Clinic - January 28th, 2023
- Acromegaly - Symptoms and causes - Mayo Clinic - January 20th, 2023
- Growth hormone-releasing hormone | You and Your Hormones from the ... - January 11th, 2023
- Growth Hormone in Sport: What Athletes Should Know | USADA - January 11th, 2023
- Growth Hormone Deficiency | Boston Children's Hospital - January 11th, 2023
- Cortisol - Wikipedia - January 11th, 2023
- Adult Growth Hormone Deficiency | Cedars-Sinai - December 25th, 2022
- Growth Hormone Deficiency | Endocrine Society - December 25th, 2022
- Plant hormone - Wikipedia - December 16th, 2022
- Growth hormone | Definition, Function, Deficiency, & Excess - December 16th, 2022
- Growth Hormone Deficiency: Causes, Symptoms & Diagnosis - Healthline - December 16th, 2022
- Growth Hormones Fed to Beef Cattle Damage Human Health - November 30th, 2022
- Growth hormone - Better Health Channel - November 21st, 2022
- Growth Hormone Tests: Protocol, Costs, Results, and More - Healthline - October 25th, 2022
- 7 amazing things that happen to your body while you sleep - October 17th, 2022
- Growth Hormone -Types, Regulation & Growth Hormone Function - BYJUS - October 17th, 2022
- Hormone Changes: The Star of Every Stage in Women's Sleep - Medscape - October 17th, 2022
- Bigg Boss 16's Abdu Rozik suffers from Growth Hormone deficiency, all you need to know - DNA India - October 17th, 2022
- 3 of the World's Tallest Men Ever Recorded Lived in Our DayAnd Some Are Still Towering Over Us Today - The Epoch Times - October 17th, 2022
- Navy SEAL leaders reprimanded over trainee's death in 'Hell Week' - Los Angeles Times - October 17th, 2022
- New Technology Developments in Protein Therapeutics Market to Grow during Forecast year 2022-2030 | Abbott Laboratories, Amgen Inc., Baxter... - October 17th, 2022
- Down and Out in Paradise review a disservice to Anthony Bourdain - The Guardian - October 17th, 2022
- Discovery Of Family Of Hormones May Be Key To Increased Crop Yields - Eurasia Review - October 17th, 2022
- How Will the World Cup Shape Lionel Messis Legacy? - GQ - October 17th, 2022
- "Henry Cejudo is finished" Fans hilariously react to internet celebrity Hasbulla Magomedov signing a deal with the UFC - Sportskeeda - October 17th, 2022
- "It isnt quite like playing, but its the closest thing to it. You remember every pitch" - Legendary broadcaster Bob Costas on his comeback... - October 17th, 2022
- Understand the different functions of pituitary gland - Telangana Today - October 17th, 2022
- 'How Hormone Replacement Therapy Impacted My Strength Training' - Women's Health - October 9th, 2022
- Nugenix Total T Reviews - Why We Are Disappointed With This T Booster - Deccan Herald - October 9th, 2022
- Is Inflammation Good for Muscle Growth? And Does it Help to Eat Your Protein Before Your Vegetables? - STACK - October 9th, 2022
- Nairobi Student With Kidney Infection, Stunted Growth in Desperate Need of KSh 1.4m for Treatment - Tuko.co.ke - October 9th, 2022
- Zerodha CEO Nithin Kamath practises 12-hour fastingbut is that good for your health? - The Indian Express - October 9th, 2022
- 5 Health Risks You Face Due to Lack of Sleep - News18 - October 9th, 2022
- Acromegaly Market Size was USD 1326.6 million in 2021 and it is expected to rise during the study period (2019-2032) - Digital Journal - September 30th, 2022
- Aaron Judge Ties the Real Home Run Record - Rolling Stone - September 30th, 2022
- The Global Protein Therapeutics Market size is expected to reach $490.2 billion by 2028, rising at a market growth of 6.9% CAGR during the forecast... - September 30th, 2022
- Biosimilars Market to reach a size of US$ 100.5 Bn by the end of 2032 - GlobeNewswire - September 30th, 2022
- PCOS awareness: Know how it is linked to diabetes and secondary infertility - Health shots - September 30th, 2022
- Top 7 benefits of olive oil for hair growth and ways to use it - PINKVILLA - September 30th, 2022
- Growth hormone in IVF: the endometrial effect - ESHRE - September 22nd, 2022
- 7 Everyday Foods To Avoid For Healthy Skin - Evie Magazine - September 22nd, 2022
- Health Beat: NEC in preemies | Health Beat | wfmz.com - 69News WFMZ-TV - September 22nd, 2022
- Popular YouTubers The Boys geek out over Hasbulla for 15 minutes straight - We Got This Covered - September 22nd, 2022
- Livestock bred with growth promoters unhealthy for consumption Prof Adetunji - Punch Newspapers - September 22nd, 2022
- Targeted Therapy to Treat Cancer - The Epoch Times - September 22nd, 2022
- I tried popular weight loss diet for two weeks heres the surprising things I learned... - The US Sun - September 22nd, 2022
- Dr. Oz Returns with the Momentum to Take Out Fetterman - The Clay Travis & Buck Sexton Show - September 22nd, 2022
- Complicated Urinary Tract Infections Market to Witness Growth at a CAGR of 5.9% by 2032 | DelveInsight - PR Newswire - September 14th, 2022
- 6 Signs You're Aging Faster Than You Should Eat This Not That - Eat This, Not That - September 14th, 2022
- Triple-Negative Breast Cancer Treatment Market to Experience Significant Growth During the Forecast Period 2026 - BioSpace - September 14th, 2022
- Amolyt Pharma Announces Positive Efficacy and Safety Data from First Cohort of Phase 2a Study of AZP-3601 in Patients with Hypoparathyroidism at the... - September 14th, 2022
- Like it or not, e-bikes on Hilton Head are here - Charleston Post Courier - September 14th, 2022
- Biosimilars Global Market Opportunities and Strategies Report 2022: Long-term Forecast to 2026 & 2031 - ResearchAndMarkets.com - Business Wire - September 6th, 2022
- Lumos Pharma to Participate in the HC Wainwright 24th Annual Global Investment Conference - GuruFocus.com - September 6th, 2022
- Role of Sirtuins in Diabetes and Age-Related Processes - Cureus - September 6th, 2022
- The Global External Fixation Systems Market to Witness Growth at a CAGR of 5.62% During the Study Period (20192027) | DelveInsight - Yahoo Finance - September 6th, 2022
- Hasbulla Magomedov: Who is Hasbulla? Why is the Russian an online sensation? Whats his medical condition? - The Scotsman - September 6th, 2022
- Here's What Happens to Your Body When You Stop Eating Dairy - The Beet - August 29th, 2022
- Build upper body muscle and define your arms with this 10-minute dumbbell workout - Fit and Well - August 29th, 2022
- The global pen needles market is expected to grow at a CAGR of 6.09% during 2022 to 2027. - Yahoo Finance - August 29th, 2022
- Novartis waves bye to biosimilars with Sandoz split - BioProcess Insider - BioProcess Insider - August 29th, 2022
- This is What High Cholesterol Does to Your Body Eat This Not That - Eat This, Not That - August 29th, 2022
- 10 ways to manage stress via The Vagus Nerve - YourStory - August 21st, 2022
- Stress can throw off circadian rhythms and lead to weight gain - Medical News Today - August 21st, 2022
- Carolyn Hansen: Balance and wellness for a longer, healthier life - Northern Advocate - August 21st, 2022
- Global Metabolic Partnering Report 2022: Deal Trends, Players and Financials Analysis of 1100+ Deals Signed Since 2015 - ResearchAndMarkets.com -... - August 21st, 2022
- Genexine Announces Dosing of First Patient in Phase 2 clinical trial with Triple Combination Therapy in Patients with Head and Neck Squamous Cell... - August 21st, 2022
- Evidence of off-target movement of dicamba in the Midwest - Successful Farming - August 13th, 2022