Date: 20080604
Docket: T-1564-07
Citation: 2008 FC 700
Toronto, Ontario, June 4,
2008
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Hughes
BETWEEN:
ABBOTT
LABORATORIES LIMITED
Applicant
and
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA
and MINISTER OF HEALTH
Respondents
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
The
Applicant, Abbott Laboratories Limited is seeking judicial review of a decision
of the Minister of Health not to list Canadian Letters Patent No. 2,182,620
(the ’620 patent) on the Patent Register pursuant to the Patented Medicines
(Notice of Compliance) Regulations), SOR/93-133 as amended, October 5,
2006, (NOC Regulations) in respect of a certain Notice of Compliance
(NOC) issued to the Applicant in respect of a drug known as MERIDA. For the reasons
that follow, I find that the application is dismissed with costs.
[2]
The
NOC Regulations were first put in place in 1993. Several amendments
have been made to those Regulations. Of importance here are the NOC
Regulations as amended on October 5, 2006 in respect of listing- adding to
the register- a patent in respect of the use of a medicine. Sections 4(1) and
4(2)(d) of the NOC Regulations, as so amended, read:
4. (1) A first person who
files or who has filed a new drug submission or a supplement to a new drug
submission may submit to the Minister a patent list in relation to the
submission or supplement for addition to the register.
(2) A patent on a patent list in relation to a new drug submission is
eligible to be added to the register if the patent contains
(d) a claim for the use of the medicinal ingredient, and the use has been
approved through the issuance of a notice of compliance in respect of the
submission
|
4. (1) La première personne qui dépose ou a déposé la
présentation de drogue nouvelle ou le supplément à une présentation de drogue
nouvelle peut présenter au ministre, pour adjonction au registre, une liste
de brevets qui se rattache à la présentation ou au supplément.
(2) Est admissible à l’adjonction au registre tout
brevet, inscrit sur une liste de brevets, qui se rattache à la présentation
de drogue nouvelle, s’il contient, selon le cas :
(d) une
revendication de l’utilisation de l’ingrédient médicinal, l’utilisation ayant
été approuvée par la délivrance d’un avis de conformité à l’égard de la
présentation.
|
[3]
In
this case, the Applicant already has an NOC relating to the medicine,
sibutramine, number 048598 and it seeks to add the ’620 patent to the list of
patents kept in respect thereof. The Minister refused to do so.
[4]
To
determine whether a patent should be added to an existing NOC under the
provisions of paragraph 4(2)(d) of the amended NOC Regulations, the
Minister is required to make a three step determination:
1. What use does
the patent claim?
2. What is the
use approved by the existing NOC?
3. Is the use
claimed by the patent that which is approved by the existing NOC?
[5]
The
Minister in the present case determined that the use claimed in the ’620 patent
was not the use approved by NOC 048598 thus the Minister would not accept that
patent for listing as against that NOC.
[6]
The
Minister’s decision was set out in a letter dated July 25, 2007, from David Lee
who was at the time the Director of the relevant department. That letter
states, in part:
As per paragraph 4(2)(d) of
the PM(NOC) Regulations, a patent on a patent list in relation to a new drug
submission is eligible to be added to the Patent Register if the patent
contains a claim for the use of the medicinal ingredient, and the use has
been approved through the issuance of a notice of compliance in respect of the
new drug submission. In the view of the OPML, the ’620 patent does not
contain a claim for the use of the medicinal ingredient which has been approved
through the issuance of a notice of compliance in respect of new drug
submission 048598 for the drug product MERIDIA.
The approved use of MERIDIA as
indicated in the Product Monograph is for adjunctive therapy within a weight
management program for: obese patients with an initial body mass index of
30kg/m2 or higher, or obese patients with an initial body mass index
of 27kg/m2 or higher in the presence of other risk factors (eg.
controlled hypertension, type 2 diabetes, dyslipidemia, and visceral fat). As
such, MERIDIA is approved as an antiobesity agent/anorexiant for the use in
adjunctive therapy within a weight management program to treat obese patients.
It is not indicated for the treatment of hypertension, type 2 diabetes
(Non-Insulin Dependent Diabetes Mellitus), dyslipidemia, and visceral fat.
In contrast, the ’620 patent
contains claims for the use of sibutramine hydrochloride monohydrate for
improving the glucose tolerance of humans having Impaired Glucose Tolerance
(pre-type 2 diabetes) or non-Insulin Dependent Diabetes Mellitus (type 2
diabetes). The claims are not directed towards the treatment of obesity. As
such, the OPML is of the position that the uses claimed in the ’620 patent have
not been approved through the issuance of the notice of compliance for the drug
product MERIDIA and as such, the ’620 patent is not eligible to be added to the
Patent Register in respect of new drug submission 048598.
As discussed in the Regulatory
Impact Analysis Statement accompanying the October 5, 2006 amendments to the PM
(NOC) Regulations, product specificity is the key consideration required of the
Minister in applying the listing requirements under section 4 of the PM(NOC)
Regulations. The amended language of section 4 more precisely reflects the
intended link between the subject matter of a patent on a patent list and the
content of the underlying submission for the notice of compliance in relation
to which it is submitted. In the view of the OPML, listing of the ’620 patent
on the Patent Register would undermine the intent of the PM(NOC) Regulations in
this respect.
Therefore, pursuant to the
authority vested in the Minister of Health by subsection 3(2) of the PM(NOC)
Regulations, the ’620 patent will not be added to the Patent Register for the
above-noted drug submission.
[7]
The
Applicant says that the Minister’s decision was wrong and that the uses claimed
in the patent and the NOC are sufficiently related so as to permit listing.
The Respondents say that the Minister’s decision was right.
ISSUES
[8]
The
issue, put simply, is whether the Minister’s decision was correct or reasonable
as the case may be, and if not, should the Court simply send the matter back
for redetermination or should the Court direct that the Minister list the
patent and, if so, as of the date the request to list was made or as of the
date of Judgment.
[9]
In
determining the fundamental issue, I am required to consider a number of
matters, namely:
1. Should the
Court receive new evidence in the way of Dr. Lewanczuk’s affidavit in whole or
in part and if so, for what purpose or purposes?
2. What is the
proper standard of review of the Minister’s decision?
3. Having regard
to the proper standard of review:
·
What
is the proper construction of the claims of the ’620 patent?
·
What
is the proper determination of the uses already approved in the existing NOC?
·
What
is a proper comparison of the claim and NOC approved uses?
NEW EVIDENCE OF DR.
LEWANCZUK
[10]
This
proceeding is a judicial review. As such, the Court should only be looking at
the record that the Minister had before him or her in arriving at the decision
under review. The Courts have, therefore, received into evidence the record
before the decision-maker whether as a certified record or under affidavit of
an appropriate person. The affidavit of Anne Bowes filed by the Respondents
and that of Loretta del Bosco filed by the Applicant serve this purpose as well
as certain certified documents.
[11]
The
affidavit of Dr. Lewanczuk falls into a different category. He purports to
give expert evidence as to the treatment of obesity, obesity and impaired
glucose tolerance, MERIDIA and its approved uses, sibutramine use in a weight
management program, improved glucose tolerance as a secondary endpoint, his
experience prescribing sibutramine, how the person skilled in the art would
read the ’620 patent and certain conclusions as to whether the use claimed by
the ’620 patent is within the use approved by the NOC.
[12]
Dr.
Lewanczuk apparently attended a meeting between representatives of the
Applicant and of the Minister. There is no contemporaneous record as to what
was said at that meeting. There is no evidence of any written submission made
by Dr. Lewanczuk. The only evidence as to what he said at the meeting is found
in the submissions made by the Applicant’s lawyer in a letter dated June 7,
2006 to the Minister’s representatives. That letter says, in part:
SUMMARY OF ABBOTT’S POSITION
In Abbot’s
view, the 620 Patent contains claims for the approved use of sibutramine, the
medicinal ingredient in Meridia®. A physician practising today
would understand the approved use of Meridia® to include the use of
“improving the glucose tolerance of humans having Impaired Glucose Tolerance or
Non-Insulin Dependent Diabetes Mellitus”, as recited in the claims of the 620
Patent.
Abbott’s
position in this respect is strongly supported by the opinion of Dr. Richard
Lewanczuk, a leading expert on obesity and diabetes.
SUBMISSIONS
620 Patent Contains Claims for
the Approved Use
On May 7,
2007, Dr. Lewanczuk and representatives of Abbott attended a meeting with Anne
Bowes, Michelle Ciesielski, Waleed Jubran and other representatives of OPML to
discuss issues relating to the listability of the 620 Patent. During that
meeting, Dr. Lewanczuk gave his opinion that a physician would understand the
approved use of sibutramine to include “improving the glucose tolerance of humans
having Impaired Glucose Tolerance or Non-Insulin Dependent Diabetes Mellitus”,
as recited in the claims of the 620 Patent.
[13]
The
nature of Dr. Lewanczuk’s submissions can be gathered from page 7 of the letter
of June 7, 2007 which says in part:
Sibutramine Currently Used for
Improving Glucose Tolerance
In fact,
physicians currently use sibutramine as an approved therapeutic option for
“improving the glucose tolerance of humans having Impaired Glucose Tolerance
[i.e., pre-type 2 diabetes] or Non-Insulin Dependent Diabetes Mellitus [i.e.,
type 2 diabetes]”.
As Dr. Lewanczuk pointed out,
it is now well-known that improving glucose tolerance improves both Impaired
Glucose Tolerance (i.e. pre-type 2 diabetes) and Non-Insulin Dependent Diabetes
Mellitus (i.e., type 2 diabetes) and that a weight management program improves
glucose tolerance.8
However, weight
management programs involving dietary and lifestyle changes alone are only
partially effective due to many patients’ inability to adapt to and maintain
such changes. It is now well known that the low success rate of
non-pharmacologic weight management programs is greatly increased by adjunctive
pharmacologic therapy using drugs such as sibutramine.9
As Dr. Lewanczuk emphasised,
there would be no doubt in the mind of a physician practising today that the
use of sibutramine as adjunctive therapy, within a weight management program,
would lead to improved glucose tolerance along with weight loss. The physician
would prescribe sibutramine for such a use. In doing so, the physician would
be guided by the Product Monograph for MERIDIA®: …
[14]
Care
must be taken when referring to Dr. Lewanczuk’s affidavit filed with the Court
in these proceedings. This is a judicial review of the Minister’s decision
thus regard is to be had only to the record before the Minister. Additional
evidence filed with the Court that may endeavour to add to, correct, and
supplement the evidence before the Minister is not permissible on a judicial
review. Additional evidence can only be filed with the Court where it
describes the proceedings and the evidence before the tribunal whose decision
is under review, or where jurisdiction or lack of procedural fairness or bias
is in issue (see e.g. Kante v. Canada (Minister of
Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2007 FC 109 at paras.
9 and 10).
[15]
Applicant’s
counsel points to decisions such as that of the Federal Court of Appeal in GlaxoSmithKline
Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General), 2005 FCA 197 where Justice Pelletier in
concurring reasons refers to expert evidence filed in a judicial review
proceeding similar to this one at paragraphs 20 to 25 of his Reasons. Counsel
also says that the question of listing a patent is a critical part of the NOC
process and, where no particular process for considering that question or
reviewing a decision is provided for in the NOC Regulations, the Court
should be more lenient in accepting such affidavit evidence.
[16]
It
appears from a review of authorities such as GlaxoSmithKline that the
Court’s attention had not been drawn to the admissibility of new evidence. In
any event, the point taken by that Court in referring to that evidence is with
respect to patent construction. The parties agree that patent construction is
a matter of law, to be done by the Court, assisted by experts if necessary to
explain the meaning of words, terms, science and background. However, this is
not to be construed as an invitation to present masses of expert evidence or
shift the focus of construction to a battle of experts. As I said in Pfizer
Canada Inc. v. Canada (Minister of Health), 2008 FC 11
at paragraph 47:
47
Construction of the
disclosure of the patent, as well as construction of the claims, is the task of
the Court, not experts or the inventor(s). The Court may be informed by experts
as to the meaning of words, terms and the science and background that are
pertinent, but the Court must be careful not to let the experts supplant the
role of the Court. Construction does not become a battle of experts; it is a
duty of the Court. As I said in Eli Lilly Canada v. Novopharm Ltd., [2007] F.C.J. No. 800, 2007 FC 596 (appeal dismissed as moot, [2007] F.C.J. No. 1498, 2007 FCA 359) at paragraphs 103 and 104:
[103]
A patent decision should, begin with a construction of the patent (Whirlpool
Inc. v. Camco Inc. [2000] 2 S.C.R. 1067 at para. 43). This applies not
only to the claims but to the whole of the patent as well when required (Burton
Parsons Chemicals Inc. v. Hewlett-Packard (Canada) Inc. [1976] 1 S.C.R. 555 at page 563; Western Electric Co.
v. Baldwin International Radio of Canada, [1934] S.C.R. 570 at page 572).
[104]
Construction is a task for the Court alone (Whirlpool supra; Burton Parsons
supra.) the role of an expert, if required, is limited to assisting the Court
in putting the Court in the position of a person skilled in the art of the
relevant time (Halford v. Seed Hawk Inc., [2006] F.C.J. No. 1205, 2006 FCA 275 at para 11). In Dableh v. Ontario
Hydro [1996] 3 F.C. 751 at paragraph 33 the Federal Court of
Appeal stated what the role of the expert is:
It
is a matter of accepted law that the task of constructing a patent's claim lies
within the exclusive domain of the trial judge. In strict legal theory it is
the role of expert witnesses that is those skilled in the art, to provide the
judge with the technical knowledge necessary to construe a patent as though he
or she were so skilled. Where the experts disagree, it is incumbent on the
trial judge to make a binding determination.
[17]
Dr.
Lewanczuk’s evidence as far as claim construction is concerned is set out at
paragraphs 44 to 51 of his affidavit. I repeat paragraphs 47 to 51. I put no
weight on paragraphs other than 44 to 51 of his affidavit as they are not
directed to claim construction despite argument of Applicant’s counsel to make
them somehow relevant. Dr. Lewanczuk’s affidavit clearly points to paragraphs
44 to 51 as being those directed to claim construction:
47.
As
of August 1995, a skilled person would understand that claim 6 specifically
claims the use of sibutramine for improving the glucose tolerance of humans
having impaired glucose tolerance or non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus
(“NIDDM”). A person skilled in the art would understand NIDDM to mean type 2
diabetes.
48.
As
of August 1995, a skilled person reading the ’620 Patent would understand that
improving the glucose tolerance of humans having impaired glucose tolerance
includes any clinically significant improvement in glucose tolerance.
49.
As
of August 1995, a skilled person would likewise understand that improved
glucose tolerance in a patent with impaired glucose tolerance would be expected
to promote weight loss and be useful in a weight management program.
50.
As
of August 1995, a skilled person would therefore understand the claims of the
’620 Patent, and specifically claim 6, to include the use of sibutramine in an
obese patent with impaired glucose tolerance to improve glucose tolerance and
therefore promote weight loss.
51.
Although
the claims of the patent do not specifically refer to obese patients, a person
skilled in the art would find nothing in the claim of the ’620 patent or its
disclosure that would limit the claimed use such that sibutramine could not be
used as adjunctive therapy within a weight management program for obese
patients. To the contrary, as of August 1995, a person skilled in the art
would understand and expect that the claimed use would be valuable in obese
patents who have impaired glucose tolerance, as adjunctive therapy within a
weight management program.
[18]
Paragraph
51 in particular is very carefully worded and contains the essence of the
Applicant’s position in this proceeding. I will return to this matter later.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
1) Standard
of Review
[19]
Since
Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, there has
been a necessity to take a fresh approach to the issue as to what standard of
review is applicable to any particular decision under review. The decision of
the majority of the Supreme Court at paragraph 45 states that there are now
only two standards of review, reasonableness and correctness:
45 We therefore conclude that the two variants
of reasonableness review should be collapsed into a single form of
"reasonableness" review. The result is a system of judicial review
comprising two standards correctness and reasonableness. But the revised system
cannot be expected to be simpler and more workable unless the concepts it employs
are clearly defined.
[20]
As
to “reasonableness” the majority in Dunsmuir at paragraph 47 said
that it is a deferential standard and that tribunals must be afforded a range
of acceptable and rational solutions:
47 Reasonableness is a deferential standard
animated by the principle that underlies the development of the two previous
standards of reasonableness: certain questions that come before administrative
tribunals do not lend themselves to one specific, particular result. Instead,
they may give rise to a number of possible, reasonable conclusions. Tribunals
have a margin of appreciation within the range of acceptable and rational
solutions. A court conducting a review for reasonableness inquires into the
qualities that make a decision reasonable, referring both to the process of
articulating the reasons and to outcomes. In judicial review, reasonableness is
concerned mostly with the existence of justification, transparency and
intelligibility within the decision-making process. But it is also concerned
with whether the decision falls within a range of possible, acceptable outcomes
which are defensible in respect of the facts and law.
[21]
Further
light as to “reasonableness” can be derived from the more recent
decision of the Supreme Court in Lake v. Canada (Minister of
Justice),
2008 SCC 23. The unanimous decision of the Court was delivered by LeBel J. At
paragraph 41 he says that a Court must determine if the decision falls within a
range of reasonable outcomes:
41 Reasonableness does not
require blind submission to the Minister's assessment; however, the standard
does entail more than one possible conclusion. The reviewing court's role is
not to re-assess the relevant factors and substitute its own view. Rather, the
court must determine whether the Minister's decision falls within a range of
reasonable outcomes. To apply this standard in the extradition context, a court
must ask whether the Minister considered the relevant facts and reached a
defensible conclusion based on those facts. I agree with Laskin J.A. that the
Minister must, in reaching his decision, apply the correct legal test. The
Minister's conclusion will not be rational or defensible if he has failed to
carry out the proper analysis. If, however, the Minister has identified the
proper test, the conclusion he has reached in applying that test should be
upheld by a reviewing court unless it is unreasonable. This approach does not
minimize the protection afforded by the Charter. It merely reflects the fact that in the
extradition context, the proper assessments under ss. 6(1) and 7 involve
primarily fact-based balancing tests. Given the Minister's expertise and his
obligation to ensure that Canada complies with its international commitments, he is
in the best position to determine whether the factors weigh in favour of or
against extradition.
[22]
As
to “correctness”, the majority in Dunsmuir at paragraph 50 stated
that this standard must be maintained in respect of jurisdictional questions
and some other questions of law:
50 As important as it is that
courts have a proper understanding of reasonableness review as a deferential
standard, it is also without question that the standard of correctness must be
maintained in respect of jurisdictional and some other questions of law. This
promotes just decisions and avoids inconsistent and unauthorized application of
law. When applying the correctness standard, a reviewing court will not show
deference to the decision maker's reasoning process; it will rather undertake
its own analysis of the question. The analysis will bring the court to decide
whether it agrees with the determination of the decision maker; if not, the
court will substitute its own view and provide the correct answer. From the
outset, the court must ask whether the tribunal's decision was correct.
[23]
In
determining the appropriate standard of review, the majority in Dunsmuir
at paragraphs 51 to 65 gave guidance which is best summarized at paragraphs 53 to
56 and 62 to 64:
53 Where
the question is one of fact, discretion or policy, deference will usually apply
automatically (Canada (Attorney General) v. Mossop, [1993] 1 S.C.R. 554, at pp. 599-600; Dr. Q, at para. 29; Suresh,
at paras. 29-30). We believe that the same standard must apply to the review of
questions where the legal and factual issues are intertwined with and cannot be
readily separated.
54 Guidance
with regard to the questions that will be reviewed on a reasonableness standard
can be found in the existing case law. Deference will usually result where a
tribunal is interpreting its own statute or statutes closely connected to its
function, with which it will have particular familiarity: Canadian Broadcasting
Corp. v. Canada (Labour Relations Board), [1995] 1 S.C.R. 157, at para. 48; Toronto
(City) Board of Education v. O.S.S.T.F., District 15, [1997] 1 S.C.R. 487, at para. 39. Deference may also be
warranted where an administrative tribunal has developed particular expertise
in the application of a general common law or civil law rule in relation to a
specific statutory context: Toronto
(City) v. C.U.P.E., at para. 72. Adjudication in labour law
remains a good example of the relevance of this approach. The case law has
moved away considerably from the strict position evidenced in McLeod v. Egan, [1975] 1 S.C.R. 517, where it was held that an
administrative decision maker will always risk having its interpretation of an
external statute set aside upon judicial review.
55 A
consideration of the following factors will lead to the conclusion that the
decision maker should be given deference and a reasonableness test applied:
A
privative clause: this is a statutory direction from Parliament or a
legislature indicating the need for deference.
A
discrete and special administrative regime in which the decision maker has
special expertise (labour relations for instance).
The
nature of the question of law. A question of law that is of "central
importance to the legal system ... and outside the ... specialized area of
expertise" of the administrative decision maker will always attract a
correctness standard (Toronto (City) v.
C.U.P.E., at para. 62). On the other hand, a question
of law that does not rise to this level may be compatible with a reasonableness
standard where the two above factors so indicate.
56 If
these factors, considered together, point to a standard of reasonableness, the
decision maker's decision must be approached with deference in the sense of
respect discussed earlier in these reasons. There is nothing unprincipled in
the fact that some questions of law will be decided on the basis of
reasonableness. It simply means giving the adjudicator's decision appropriate
deference in deciding whether a decision should be upheld, bearing in mind the
factors indicated.
…
62 In
summary, the process of judicial review involves two steps. First, courts
ascertain whether the jurisprudence has already determined in a satisfactory
manner the degree of deference to be accorded with regard to a particular
category of question. Second, where the first inquiry proves unfruitful, courts
must proceed to an analysis of the factors making it possible to identify the
proper standard of review.
63 The
existing approach to determining the appropriate standard of review has
commonly been referred to as "pragmatic and functional". That name is
unimportant. Reviewing courts must not get fixated on the label at the expense
of a proper understanding of what the inquiry actually entails. Because the
phrase "pragmatic and functional approach" may have misguided courts
in the past, we prefer to refer simply to the "standard of review
analysis" in the future.
64
The analysis must be contextual. As mentioned
above, it is dependent on the application of a number of relevant factors,
including: (1) the presence or absence of a privative clause; (2) the purpose
of the tribunal as determined by interpretation of enabling legislation; (3)
the nature of the question at issue, and; (4) the expertise of the tribunal. In
many cases, it will not be necessary to consider all of the factors, as some of
them may be determinative in the application of the reasonableness standard in
a specific case.
[24]
In
the present case, the Minister was called upon to answer those questions as
posed previously:
1.
What
use does the patent claim?
2.
What
is the use approved by the existing NOC?
3.
Is
the use claimed by the patent that which is approved by the existing NOC?
[25]
The
parties are agreed that where the issue is a question of law, the standard of
review is correctness, and where the issue is one of fact, the standard is
reasonableness and where the issue is one of mixed fact and law that cannot be
separated, the standard is reasonableness. Justice Gauthier of this Court in GD
Searle & Co. v. Canada (Minister of Health), 2008 FC 437 held that
construction of the NOC Regulations and patent claim construction were
questions of law and must be reviewed on a standard of correctness. I agree.
She said at paragraphs 17 and 18:
17 Because
the Minister conceded that the relevant SNDS was for a change in the use of the
medicinal ingredient that was approved through the issuance of an NOC4, the parties agree that the '201 patent's
eligibility for listing depends entirely on the construction of claims 14 and
15 as well as the construction of subsection 4 (3) of the NOC Regulations. Both
issues are pure questions of law.
18 The
Court is satisfied that in this particular case, the two questions of law are
extricable from the question of fact (which was conceded) and that therefore,
the decision of the Minister in respect of those two questions will be reviewed
on the basis of correctness.
[26]
In
a decision made before Dunsmuir, supra the Federal Court of
Appeal in Ferring Inc. v. Canada (Minister of Health), 2007 FCA 276 held
in similar circumstances that where the question is one of mixed fact and law,
the Minister’s decision respecting listing is to be determined on a standard of
patent unreasonableness. Chief Justice Richard said at paragraph 8:
8 I
would add that where there is a mixed question of law and fact then the
standard of review is patent unreasonableness unless the question of law is
extricable from the question of fact in which case the question of law is
determined on the basis of correctness.
[27]
Given
that we are in post-Dunsmuir environment, a standard of patent
unreasonableness no longer can apply. However, on the standard of
reasonableness, considerable deference still should be given to decisions of
the Minister where the questions are those of mixed fact and law as well as
those of fact alone.
[28]
In
summary:
1.
Patent
claim construction is a matter of law to be reviewed on a standard of
correctness.
2.
The
uses approved by the existing NOC are questions of fact and are to be reviewed
on this basis of reasonableness with considerable deference given to the
Minister’s decision.
3.
The
consideration as to how the uses claimed in the patent compare with those
approved by the NOC for purposes of section 4(2)(d) of the NOC Regulations
involves mixed fact and law and considerable deference should be given to the
Minister’s decision.
PATENT CLAIM
CONSTRUCTION
[29]
Claim
6 of the ’620 patent has been referred to by all parties as a good
representative of the claims of that patent for purposes of what is at issue in
these proceedings. It reads:
6.
The
use of N,N-dimethyl-1-[1-(4-chlorophenyl)-cyclobutyl]-3-methylbutylamine hydrochloride
monohydrate for improving the glucose tolerance of humans having Impaired
Glucose Tolerance or Non-Insulin Dependent Diabetes Mellitus.
[30]
This
claim can be simplified both as to the chemistry and uses (see Abbott’s lawyers
letter of June 7, 2007 to the Office of Patented Medicines, page 4) to read as
follows:
6. The use of sibutramine for
improving the glucose tolerance of humans having pre-type 2 diabetes or type 2
diabetes.
[31]
Dr.
Lewanczuk’s opinion at paragraph 51 of his affidavit previously set out is very
carefully worded and, as worded, is not apparently contradicted by the
Respondents. That paragraphs says in brief:
·
Nothing
limits the claimed use such that it could not be used in adjunctive therapy
within a weight management program for obese patients (a double negative).
·
The
claimed use is understood and expected to be valuable to obese patients who
have impaired glucose tolerance, as an adjunctive therapy within a weight
management program.
[32]
Applicant’s
counsel concedes that the word “obese” does not appear in any of the
claims of the ’620 patent but points out that in the description there are two
examples given each of which deal with the treatment of obese patients. Claims
however which are unambiguous should not be limited to the examples given in
the description (Dableh v. Ontario Hydro, [1996] 3 F.C. 751 at 755 (C.A.)).
Here the claims are not limited to or specifically directed to obese persons,
they include obese as well as any other persons to be treated for pre-type 2 or
type 2 diabetes related glucose tolerance problems. In effect, Dr. Lewanczuk
is saying that the claimed use in useful in treating obese persons with glucose
tolerance problems of this type, but, what he is not saying is that the claimed
uses are limited only to treating obese persons.
[33]
Thus,
with respect to the issues here, a correct claim construction of claim 6 is:
6. The use of sibutramine for
improving the glucose tolerance of humans, obese and otherwise, having pre-type
2 diabetes or type 2 diabetes.
WHAT IS THE USE APPROVED BY
THE NOC?
[34]
The
parties are agreed that the use of sibutramine, as approved by the Minister in
NOC 048598 is that as set out in the approved monograph as follows:
INDICATIONS
AND CLINICAL USE
MERIDIA® (sibutramine hydrochloride monohydrate) indicated as
adjunctive therapy within a weight management program for:
·
Obese
patients with an initial body mass index (BMI) of 30kg/m2 or higher
·
Obese
patients with an initial BMI of 27kg/m2 or higher in the presence of
other risk factors (e.g., controlled hypertension, type 2 diabetes,
dyslipidemia, visceral fat)
Distribution restrictions:
Sibutramine hydrochloride monohydrate should only be prescribed to patients who
have not adequately responded to an appropriate weight reducing diet alone.
[35]
The
product monograph, as approved, has changed from time to time but this
statement of the approved use has not changed.
[36]
Sometimes
the approved use is cryptically referred to as: “Anorexiant / Antiobesity
Agent”, but this is simply a shorthand and not the approved use as such.
[37]
The
interpretation of the NOC approved use by the Minister is set out in David
Lee’s letter of July 25, 2007 previously referred to. To repeat from the last
paragraph at page 2:
The approved use of MERIDIA as
indicated in the Product Monograph is for adjunctive therapy within a weight
management program for: obese patients with an initial body mass index of
30kg/m2 or higher; or obese patients with an initial body max index
of 27kg/m2 or higher in the presence of other risk factors (eg.
controlled hypertension, type 2 diabetes, dyslipidemia, and visceral fat). As
such, MERIDIA is approved as an antiobesity agent/anorexiant for the use in
adjunctive therapy within a weight management program to treat obese patients.
It is not indicated for the treatment of hypertension, type 2 diabetes
(Non-Insulin Dependent Diabetes Mellitus), dyslipidemia, and visceral fat.
[38]
Thus
the Minister’s interpretation of the use of sibutramine approved by the NOC is “use
within a weight management program to treat obese patients” and it is not
“for the treatment of hypertension, type 2 diabetes, dyslipidemia, and
visceral fat”.
[39]
This
interpretation is reasonable and is entitled to considerable deference. It is
the duty of the Minister and the Officials assigned to the task to administer
the Notice of Compliance regime. The Minister committed no reviewable error in
making such interpretation.
IS THE USE CLAIMED IN
THE ’620 PATENT THAT AS APPROVED BY THE NOC
[40]
To
re-iterate, the use claimed in the ’620 patent as exemplified by claim 6
properly construed is:
6. The use of sibutramine for
improving the glucose tolerance of humans, obese or otherwise, having pre-type
2 diabetes or type 2 diabetes.
[41]
The
use approved by the Minister in NOC 048598 is for the use of sibutramine “within
a weight management program to treat obese patients” and not for “the
treatment of hypertension, type 2 diabetes, dyslipidemia, and visceral fat”.
[42]
Paragraph
4(2)(d) of the NOC Regulations states:
(2) A patent on a patent list
in relation to a new drug submission is eligible to be added to the register if
the patent contains:
(d) a claim for the use of the
medicinal ingredient, and the use has been approved through the issuance of a
notice of compliance in respect of the submission.
[43]
Thus
what paragraph 4(2)(d) of the NOC Regulations requires is a
determination as to whether the use of the medicine as claimed in the
patent, is the use as approved by an NOC.
[44]
The
Minister’s determination as set out in David Lee’s letter of July 25, 2007 as
to this matter, was, to repeat:
The approved use of MERIDIA as
indicated in the Product Monograph is for adjunctive therapy within a weight
management program for: obese patients with an initial body mass index of
30kg/m2 or higher, or obese patients with an initial body mass index
of 27kg/m2 or higher in the presence of other risk factors (eg.
controlled hypertension, type 2 diabetes, dyslipidemia, and visceral fat). As
such, MERIDIA is approved as an antiobesity agent/anorexiant for use in adjunctive
therapy within a weight management program to treat obese patients. It is not
indicated for the treatment of hypertension, type 2 diabetes (Non-Insulin
Dependent Diabetes Mellitus), dyslipidemia, and visceral fat.
In contrast, the ’620 patent
contains claims for the use of sibutramine hydrochloride monohydrate for
improving the glucose tolerance of humans having Impaired Glucose Tolerance
(pre-type 2 diabetes) or non-Insulin Dependent Diabetes Mellitus (type 2
diabetes). The claims are not directed towards the treatment of obesity. As
such, the OPML is of the position that the uses claimed in the ’620 patent have
not been approved through the issuance of the notice of compliance for the drug
product MERIDIA and as such, the ’620 patent is not eligible to be added to the
Patent Register in respect of new drug submission 048598.
[45]
As
discussed previously in these Reasons, the Minister’s interpretation of the
claims of the patent is correct and interpretation of the NOC is reasonable.
Further, in law, the Minister is correct that paragraph 4(2)(d) of the NOC Regulations
requires that one be compared to the other.
[46]
The
manner in which this comparison is to be made is disputed by the Applicant
Abbott whose position in this regard was set out it its letter to the Minister
of June 7, 2007 at page 3:
In Abbott’s view, the 620
Patent contains claims for the approved use of sibutramine, the medicinal
ingredient in Meridia®. A physician practising today would
understand the approved use of Meridia® to include the use of
“improving the glucose tolerance of humans having Impaired Glucose Tolerance or
Non-Insulin Dependent Diabetes Mellitus”, as recited in the claims of the 620
Patent.
[47]
Thus
the Applicant’s position is that if the “approved use” can be said “to
include” the claimed use, then the patent should be added to the register.
The Minister found, in brief, that the approved use was “treatment of
obesity” whereas the claimed use was “improving glucose tolerance”.
[48]
In
its submissions, the Minister agrees that treatment of obese people who also
suffer from glucose intolerance with this medicine may result in treatment for
glucose intolerance of those people; however that is not what the NOC was
directed to, it was directed toward treatment of obesity.
[49]
Dr.
Lewanczuk’s carefully worded paragraph 51 of his affidavit says that a person
skilled in the art would understand and expect that the claimed use would be
valuable in obese patients who have impaired glucose tolerance, as adjunctive
therapy within a weight management program.
[50]
Applicant’s
counsel refers to three decisions of this Court which have considered similar
problems. Each of those decisions however, dealt with a use approved in an NOC
that was clearly wholly within a more broadly defined use claimed in the patent
at issue.
[51]
In
Abbott Laboratories Ltd. v. Canada (Attorney General), 2007 FC 797
(currently under appeal to be heard shortly), Justice Simpson found the NOC
approved use to be a subset of the broader use claimed in the patent with
respect to the treatment of ulcers.
[52]
In
GD Searle & Co. v. Canada (Minister of Health), 2008 FC 437 at
paragraphs 64 to 67, Justice Gauthier in obiter determined that a patent
claim for treatment of pain generally included the treatment of more specific
pain approved in the NOC.
[53]
In
Abbott Laboratories v. Canada (Minister of Health), 2008 FC 352, Justice
Barnes on a subsection 6(5) motion under the NOC Regulations held
certain patents eligible for listing on the basis as set out in paragraphs 24
to 26 that they may be relevant to potential infringement. This decision has
limited instructional value in the present case.
[54]
At
present, the Minister was aware that obese people who also have glucose
intolerance may, in taking the medicine, be treating their glucose tolerance
problems, if any. As was pointed out in argument, no party is asserting that
all obese people are glucose intolerant nor are all glucose intolerant people
obese. I find the Minster’s decision that the NOC approved use is different
from the claimed use in the ’620 patent to be reasonable such that adding the
patent to the register under paragraph 4(2)(d) of the NOC Regulations
cannot be allowed.
CONCLUSION
[55]
In
conclusion, I find that the application is to be dismissed with costs to the
Respondents at the level that has become rather usual in the proceedings of
this type, the middle of Column IV.
JUDGMENT
For the
Reasons provided herein:
THE COURT
ADJUDGES that:
1.
The
application is dismissed;
2.
The
Respondents are entitled to costs to be taxed at the middle of Column IV.
"Roger
T. Hughes"