Many generic drug companies challenged the validity of PTEs on period and the protection scope of extended patent rights.
The first issue for PTE
disputes in Korea is whether the extended period is valid or not because certain
periods of time included within the PTE should not have been included under the
relevant statutes. The second issue is on the scope of the patent right
protection for an extended term after the expiry of an original term.
1. Recent Decisions of IPTAB and Patent
Court on Period Issue
Under the Patent Act, the
"time period of delay attributable to the patentee" must be deducted
from the total delay period. The period is periods for which the patentee is
responsible for delay in the regulatory approval.
The IPTAB of KIPO and the
Patent Court affirmed the above principle. In practice, The IPTAB and The
Patent Court appear to recognise and confirm the present status of the granted
PTE periods according to KIPO's practice.
Because many cases are
still pending, the issue has not been settled yet. The Supreme Court shall
decide the issue in not too distant future.
2. Recent Decisions of IPTAB and Patent Court on the Scope of an Extended Patent Right
The Korean Patent Act Article 95 (Effects of Patent Right with its Term
Extended by Permit, etc) “The effects of a patent right, the term of which has
been extended pursuant to Article 90 (4), shall
not extend to any other acts except the working of the patented invention with respect to
such products for which approval, etc. was the basis for registering the
extension (or where approval, etc. was obtained for any specific use
of the product, with respect to the product adapted for such specific use).”
What is the effective scope
of an extended patent right through PTE registration? Article 95 of the Korean
Patent Act specifically limits the scope of the extended patent right to be
effective within working of the patented invention with respect to the
'approved product.'
Accordingly, there has
been disputes over how the terms "product" and "usage" in
the above clause should be interpreted. However, there are as yet no definitive
criteria or court decisions issued as to the interpretation of this issue.
Before the IPTAB of KIPO
and the Patent Court rendered their decisions, the IP Courts of Japan issued their
decisions. Because the corresponding provisions on PTE of the Japanese Patent
Act are really similar to those of the Korean Patent Act, the interpretations
of IP courts of Japan were closely watched by Korean patent practitioners.
For information, Article
68bis (68-2) of the Japanese Patent Law
is described as follows: “a patent right the term of which is extended via PTE
registration "shall not be effective against any act other than the
working of the patented invention for the product which was the subject of the
disposition designated by Regulation in Article 67, paragraph 2 of the Patent
Law that constituted the reason for the PTE registration (when the specific usage
of the product is prescribed in the disposition, the product used specifically
for that usage)".
The Tokyo IP High Court
stated in their opinion that "in light of the purpose of the PTE
registration system and that of a patent infringement action, it is reasonable
to understand that in the case of a patented invention relating to an
ingredient of a medicine, a patent right whose duration was extended and by
'effectiveness/efficacy'and 'dosage/regimen' as the 'usage'." For example,
the scope of an extended patent right based on a specific salt of API shall
cover other salts of API.
Unlike the IP court’s
decisions of Japan, the IPTAB of KIPO and the Patent Court of Korea held that
the scope of an extended patent right based on a specific salt of API shall NOT cover
other salts of API. Thus it was totally different interpretation. Namely, the
scope of an extended patent right based on a specific salt of API only covers
the approved Drug Product itself.
At present, the IPTAB of
KIPO and the Patent Court maintain really strict interpretations on the scope
of an extended patent right. Again, several cases are pending before the
Supreme Court, this issue has not been settled yet. The Supreme Court shall
decide the issue relating to the effective scope of a patent right extended via
PTE registration in not too distant future, too.
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