Denied Patent Term Extension for Novartis' Exelon® Patch in Korea

Novartis' Exelon® Patch has been used to treat mild to moderate dementia of the Alzheimer's type and mild to moderate dementia associated with Parkinson's disease. The active ingredient is rivastigmine.


Novartis obtained the first MA for Exelon® Capsule and the second MA for Exelon® Patch in Korea. Exelon® Patch uses a new formulation that allows rivastigmine to be administered in a transdermal therapeutic system (TTS).


Novartis listed two patents in the Green List (http://medipatent.kfda.go.kr) of KFDA pursuant to the linkage system of patent and market approval. The first patent is Korean Patent No. 133,686 that claims chemical compounds including rivastigmine, its pharmaceutical use. The term of the compound patent expired on December 23, 2012. The second patent is Korean Patent No. 569,051 that claims inventions of TTS formulation. The second patent will expire on January 8, 2019.

Novartis has another patent in issue that claims rivastigmine compound for transdermal administration and compositions for them. The patent in issue is Korean Patent No. 121,596 that has actually lmost the same scope of protection that of the basic compound patent of Korean Patent No. 133,686. The background between two patents is somewhat complicated because Korean Patent No. 121,596 stems from transient measure in 1987.

The Patentee and NDA holder, Novartis filed a petition for patent term extension of the basic compound patent on April 23, 2012. In Korea, the patent term extension system was first introduced on July 1, 1987. Under the 1987 Act that applied to the patent in issue, a petition for patent term extension may be filed only during the last three (3) years of the original term of the patent. Upon filing a PTE request, the term of the subject patent shall be extended automatically and shall be terminated on the expiry date retroactively in case the petition has been denied.

KIPO denied Novartis’ petition. Novartis appealed to the Seoul Administrative Court. On September 26, 2013, the court rejected Novartis’ arguments and denied PTE for Exelon Patch patent. The Patentee and NDA holder, Novartis appealed the lower court decision to the Seoul High Court again. The current PTE system has been based on 1990 amendment and the first PTE regulations of 1987 are quite different from those of the current PTE regulations. The PTE regulations of 1987 that must applied to Exelon Patch case had much more narrow scope than those of the current regulations in subject patents and gourds for PTE. Exelon Patch falls in such unfortunate cases during transient period between 1987 and 1990.

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