Title: An%20Introduction%20to%20IPR
1An Introduction to IPR
- S.V.N.Raju
- M.Pharm., M.B.A., DPL, DSM
- Kakatiya University Alumni
- 1992-1994
2- What is innovation ?
- What is intellectual property ?
3Innovation and Intellectual Property
- Think
- Imagine
- Create (Creations of the mind)
- WHAT WE CREATE OUT OF THIS PROCESS IS
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY VALUE
4Property
- Knowledge (IP Intangible property) is
cumulative with each idea building upon the last,
- whereas
- Machines (Tangible property) deteriorate and must
be replaced
5Types of IP
- Patents
- Copy Rights
- Trade marks
- Geographic Indications
- Protection of undisclosed information
- Layout designs of integrated circuits
- Industrial designs
6What is a patent?
- Is grant by a government or government agency.
- To an inventor
- Right to exclude others from
- Making
- Using
- Selling
- Offering for sale
- importing
7Type of patents?
- Utility patents
- Plant patents
- Design registration
8Utility patents
- Structural or functional aspects of
- Products
- Composition
- Process
9Plant patents
- New variety of living plants
10Design registration
- Ornamental designs of useful objects
- In US designs are patentable.
11Is this gives right to market
- No
- A separate permission is required to make use
- DCA or DCGI approval is required to market
pharmaceutical products.
12Some common terms
- Application
- Best mode
- Claims
- Conception
- Dependent claim
- Examiner
- Failure of others
13Some common terms cont
- How to make
- Independent claim
- Invention
- Novelty
- Obviousness
- Preferred embodiment
14Some common terms cont
- Prior art
- Provisional application
- Specification
15Some common terms cont
- Application
- A written document seeking patent protection
filed with patent office. - Best mode
- A patent application is required to disclose the
best means known to the applicant of practicing
the invention as of the date of filing the
application
16Some common terms cont
- Claims
- A claim is one of the numbered paragraphs that
appear at the end of a patent and defines the
scope of protection given to the owner of the
patent - Each claim is treated separately for purposes of
determining validity and infringement. For
example, claims may be directed toward apparatus,
methods, products, and compositions of matter and
new and useful improvements thereof.
17Some common terms cont
- Conception
- is the creation of the mental concept of the
invention. - Dependent claim
- is a claim that makes express reference to and
depends on a prior claim - thereby, incorporates by reference all of the
recitals of the prior claim
18Some common terms cont
- Examiner
- An employee of a patent office to whom an
application is assigned for handling prosecution. - Failure of others
- A secondary test of patentability relevant to the
issue of whether an invention is obvious is
whether others have failed to come up with the
solution previously.
19Some common terms cont
- How to make
- This is part of the obligation to provide a
disclosure in the patent application that would
enable one skilled in the art to practice the
invention without engaging in undue
experimentation.
20Some common terms cont
- Independent claim
- is a claim that stands by itself and must be so
read in terms of infringement and validity
evaluations. This is contrasted with a dependent
claim.
21Some common terms cont
- Invention
- in order to have a patentable invention, one must
have a development that is - useful,
- novel (no single prior art reference shows the
identical development), and - unobvious to one skilled in the art
- at the time the invention was made,
22Some common terms cont
- Novelty
- is present if no single piece of prior art
discloses every element of the claimed invention.
23Some common terms cont
- Obviousness
- If the invention could readily be deduced at the
time the invention was made from publicly
available information (prior art) by a person of
ordinary skill in that art, it is obvious. - Prior art may be combined to show that an
invention would have been obvious.
24Some common terms cont
- Preferred embodiment
- The preferred embodiment of an invention can
usually be interpreted as being recited as the
best mode known to the inventor of carrying out
the invention.
25Some common terms cont
- Prior art
- The existing body of technological information
against which an invention is judged to determine
if it is patentable as being novel and unobvious.
- It must be early enough in time to be cited
against the application.
26Some common terms cont
- Provisional application
- an applicant can file a patent specification
complying with standards and get the filing date
as a priority date. - for a complete patent application filed within
one year thereafter claiming the benefit.
27Some common terms cont
- Provisional application
- The provisional application does not have to
contain claims. - The effective filing date of the full application
for purposes of avoiding prior art will be the
filing date of the provisional application. - but will have the benefit of the date of filing
the full application for purposes of the 20 year
patent term.
28Some common terms cont
- Specification
- The part of the patent application that precedes
the claims and in which the inventor specifies,
describes, illustrates, and discloses the
invention in detail.
29Areas of the field
- Infringement
- Invalidation
- Protection (Patent filing)
30Academic perspective
31- Intellectual Property
- It Starts With An IDEA (Sur Ji)
32To Become an Innovation Leader
- Development of
- self-reliance
- technological self-confidence
33Faculty thinking
- Most faculty in Indian university does not want
to link research with IP generation or
commercialization. - In general if one is working with university
inventors, the pressure to publish is intense,
sometimes that drive to publish comes back to
bite.
34- An invention can only be protected by patent if
it is novel - (no prior publication of the invention).
- Grace period
- Therefore, it is essential not to disclose the
invention publicly until after a formal patent
application has been filed.
35- Any printed publication in
- a newspaper,
- scientific journal, or
- other written form
- available on an unrestricted basis is considered
a public disclosure, - as is an oral presentation at a public meeting.
- Note that an abstract and, in some cases,
- even a title may act to bar patentability if it
discloses all the necessary elements of the
invention.
36Rights and responsibilities
- Obtaining and maintaining IP, especially patents
require many actions and funds. - Patent search
- Patent filing
- Handle opposition and objections
- Renewal of patents
- Handle infringement
- Licensing and transfer of IP
37Nature of knowledge transfer from academics
- IP licensing is more common.
- This needs to be encouraged.
- Once licensed, renewal and maintenance should be
the responsibility of the licensee. - Academics should move quickly to new areas of
knowledge.
38IP policy
- Many universities in the developed countries of
the west have their IP policies and IP cells. - Many cells are usually managed by lawyers having
technical background. - Some are also managed by technical people.
39IP policy
- IIT at Mumbai, Kharagpur, Delhi, Chennai and IISc
have their IP policy in place. - IIT Roorkee is in the process of formulating one.
- Some other academic institutions have their
policies but most of them address royalty
sharing. - These are also the places having IP cells of
their own.
40IP policy
- Will IP policy make a difference?
- Institutes ought to generate their own
resources. Hence management will drive research
programmes accordingly. - Clarity will help faculty in making choices.
- Who doesnt like money?
41Sources of funds
- Self
- Government(s)
- Industry
- Financial institutes
- VCs
- Trusts
- Combination of two or more
- International agencies
42Issues in licensing / transfer
- Exclusive / non exclusive
- Territory of protection and exploitation
- Term
- Which IPR out of bundle of IP rights
- Renouncement of rights
- Maintaining IPR e.g., payment of renewal fees
43Issues in licensing / transfer
- Infringement
- Confidentiality
- Materials transfer agreements
- Ownership
- Sharing of rights
- Further improvements
- Remuneration to inventors
44Examples
- The University of Kansass development of IP
- 105 patents issued active
- 73 active licenses
- 48 US patents pending
- 20 active start up companies
- 19 equity positions
45Patent Filing Process
46Filing process
- Provisional application
- Non provisional application
47Provisional application
- Specific forms
- Form 1
- Form 2
- Form 3
- Fees
- Specifications
48Provisional application
- Specifications
- Title
- Introduction to the invention
- Drawings (if required)
- Model (upon request from PO)
49Non provisional application
- Specific forms
- Form 1
- Form 2
- Form 3
- Form 5
- Fees
- Specifications
50Non provisional application
- Specifications
- Title
- Introduction to the invention
- Drawings (if required)
- Model (upon request from PO)
51Non provisional application
- Specifications
- Detailed description
- Examples (best mode)
- Claim(s)
- Abstract
52Prior art search
- Patents
- Literature articles
- Journals
- Scientific Presentations
53Prior art search
- Patents
- http//www.uspto.gov/
- http//ep.espacenet.com/
- http//www.wipo.int/ipdl/en/search/pct/search-simp
.jsp
54Prior art search
- Patents Published literature
- Scifinder
- STN
- Ensemble
55Prior art search
- Published literature
- www.sciencedirect.com (for elsevier journals)
- www.tandf.co.uk/journals/online.asp (for journals
of dekker and taylor and francis publishing) - www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi (med line-
gives elsevier journals also)
56Prior art search
- Published literature
- www.aapspharmscitech.org (free full text articles
published in AAPS Pharm Sci Tech, an online
journal) - http//pubwww.srce.hr/acphee/ (acta
pharmaceutica-full text for last 2 years and
abstracts for older journals)
57Prior art search
- Published literature
- http//www.ingentaconnect.com/contentjsessionid1
3rvsr25ic2q1.victoria (many journals esp british) - pubs.acs.org/journals (journals of American
Chemical Society) - www.blackwell-synergy.com (Blackwell Synergy
Publications
58Comparison of cost
59Comparison of cost
60Cost time factor
- The cost to file, prosecute, grant and maintain a
patent varies widely by country.
61Applicants expectations
- Applicant is always interested in
- Low cost to file
- Less time in prosecution
- Less time in granting
- Minimum cost in maintainance
- All of this is only possible with PCT filing
process
62What is PCT
- Patent cooperation treaty
- A United Nations treaty
- Signed in June 1970
- Became operational in June 1978
- Administered by the International Bureau (IB) of
the World Intellectual Property Organization
(WIPO) in Geneva, Switzerland
63What PCT provides
- There is no international patent.
- The Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT) functions as
a patent application filing system. - The applicant must still prosecute the
international application in each national or
regional office in order to obtain a patent.
64Traditional filing
65Purpose of PCT
- To simplify the process of filing foreign patent
applications - To give every regional and national patent office
the benefit of a search and a preliminary report
on patentability by a major patent office
66PCT
- This system provides
- A common filing process.
- Minimizes the expenses in filing process.
- Gives enough time for an applicant to think and
choose the territory he would like to cover.
67Number of international applications
68PCT Filing
69Active Pharmaceuticals
Different ways of claiming
70Claims..
- By Chemical structure or chemical name
- Solid/crystalline/hydrated forms (Physical form)
- Purity of the API
- Alternate salts
- Process
- Physicochemical characteristics
- Technology
711. By Chemical structure or Name
1.1. Claim by large Markush structure
Atorvastatin (US 4,681,893)
Atorvastatin
- Generally possible for innovators
- Entire genus is novel
- No clarity on the final target.
- Broadest claim possible.
- No design around possible.
- Invalidation is the only option
721. By Chemical structure or Name
1.2. Claiming by simple structure Paroxetine
intermediate
- Covers limited no of novel compounds.
- Covers possible protecting groups and
derivatives. - Generally possible when a novel scheme is
designed for a known product.
731. By Chemical structure or Name
1.3. Claiming by Chemical name Atorvastatin
Calcium (US 5,273,995)
- Covers one or two specific compounds and its
salts. - Narrow in scope
- Covers the actual commercial product.
- Highly difficult to invalidate the patent.
- Generally extends the life cycle of the product.
742. By physical form
2.1. By Solid form Montelukast Acid (US
2005/107426)
- Broad claim possible, if the compound is already
known in a non-solid state. - Provide great value if some of the impurities
are washable only by purification of the solid
intermediate.
752. By physical form
2.2. By Crystalline form Amlodipine free base
(US 6680334)
- Broad claim possible, if the compound is already
known in a non-crystalline form. - Provide great value if non-crystalline form is
significantly unstable for processing and pure
product can be obtained only from crystalline
material. - Can be used as alternate to API salt form if
possible. - Generally stands in the litigation even-if the
genus claim of compound claim is invalidated.
762. By physical form
2.3. By Specific parameters Alfuzosin Base (WO
2006/090268)
- Considered as the narrow claim.
- Has value only if the known solid forms are
protected or all of them are unstable for
processing.
773. By Purity
3.1. By Purity of the API Candesartan (US
20050250827 A1)
3.1. By Chiral Purity of the APIArmodafinil (WO
2007/103221)
- API is known but with less purity.
- Provide value if the impurity is a critical
difficult to remove or forms in stability. - Competitors will have to use impure materials
and end up regulatory issues
784. Alternate salts
4.1. Alternate salts (Desvenlafaxine US7001920)
4.1. Alternate salts (Sitagliptin US2005032804)
- Narrow in scope
- Covers the actual salt of product.
- Considered as easy to invalidate the patent if
other salts are already known. - Generally extends the life cycle of the product.
794. Diasteriomer salts
4.1. Diasteriomer as compound (Eszopiclone
-WO07/088073)
4.1. Diasteriomer in crystalline form
(Eszopiclone -WO07/088073)
4.1. Diasteriomer with purity (Duloxetine-WO06/099
459)
805. Process for Preparation of API
5.1. Generic process (Ramelteon)
815. Process for Preparation of API
5.2. Simple process (Paroxetine)
825. Preparation of API
5.3. Specific process (Duloxetine HCl)
835. Preparation of API
5.4. Specific process (Ziprasidone HCl)
846. Physicochemical properties
6.1. PSD of API compound (Ziprasidone HCl
-US6150366)
1. A composition comprising crystalline
ziprasidone free base or crystalline ziprasidone
hydrochloride particles having a mean particle
size equal to or less than about 85 µ and a
pharmaceutically acceptable diluent or carrier.
6.2. PSD of API compound (Escitalopram -US6916941)
6.3. PSD BD of API compound (Atorvastatin
-WO2007100614)
Covers non-crystalline solid Atorvastatin salt
having bulk density from about 0.05 to 0.4 g/ml
and mean particle size of about 0.5 to 50 microns
857. Technology
Synthesis of Piperizine ring (Mirtzapine-US
6852855)
867. Technology
Synthesis of Amino acid amides (Levitiracetum-US
2005/0182262)
87 88Examples
- Some examples of different formulation patents
- Exhibit
- Some examples of weak vs strong patents
- Exhibit