Federal Circuit Vacates Schizophrenia Drug Patent Ruling in Sumitomo v. Slayback Pharma
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📋 Résumé de l'affaire
| Nom de l'affaire | Sumitomo Pharma Co., Ltd. v. Slayback Pharma, LLC |
| Numéro de dossier | 22-2276 (Fed. Cir.) |
| Tribunal | Circuit fédéral, appel du circuit de Washington D.C. |
| Durée | Sept 2022 – Apr 2024 1 year 7 months |
| Résultat | Libéré et renvoyé |
| Brevets en cause | |
| Produits incriminés | Treatment agent for schizophrenia |
Aperçu du dossier
In a significant procedural development for pharmaceutical patent litigation, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit vacated and remanded a lower court’s ruling on the validity of a schizophrenia treatment patent in Sumitomo Pharma Co., Ltd. v. Slayback Pharma, LLC (Case No. 22-2276). The Federal Circuit’s decision, issued after 554 days of appellate proceedings, sends the patentability dispute back for further review — preserving Sumitomo’s position on U.S. Patent No. US9815827B2, a compound patent directed to an agent for the treatment of schizophrenia.
For pharmaceutical patent attorneys, in-house IP counsel, and R&D leaders operating in the CNS (central nervous system) drug space, this case underscores the continued volatility of invalidity challenges against branded pharmaceutical patents and the Federal Circuit’s willingness to scrutinize lower-court patentability determinations. The outcome reflects broader litigation dynamics in the ANDA (Abbreviated New Drug Application) and Hatch-Waxman ecosystem, where generic entry timelines hinge on patent validity disputes.
Les parties
⚖️ Demandeur
Japanese multinational pharmaceutical company with a significant CNS drug portfolio, holding proprietary rights to psychiatric and neurological therapeutics.
🛡️ Défendeur
New Jersey-based generic pharmaceutical developer known for pursuing ANDA pathways to bring lower-cost alternatives to market.
Le brevet en cause
This case involved a compound patent covering an agent for the treatment of schizophrenia. The patent represents a key intellectual property asset for Sumitomo in defending market exclusivity against generic competition.
- • US9815827B2 — Compound patent for an agent for the treatment of schizophrenia
- • Application Number: US14/471919
- • Technology Area: Pharmaceutical chemistry — CNS therapeutics
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Le verdict et l'analyse juridique
Résultat
The Federal Circuit vacated and remanded the lower tribunal’s ruling. No damages were awarded at the appellate level, consistent with the procedural nature of a vacatur. No injunctive relief determination was made at this stage. The case is returned to the originating forum for reconsideration consistent with the appellate court’s guidance.
A vacatur-and-remand is neither a plaintiff win nor a defendant win in the conventional sense — it is a directive that the prior decision was legally flawed and must be reconsidered. For Sumitomo, this outcome preserves the validity of US9815827B2 against immediate cancellation. For Slayback, the invalidity argument remains live.
Principales questions juridiques
The verdict cause is identified as patentability, with the action classified as an invalidity/cancellation challenge. This framing suggests Slayback pursued arguments that Sumitomo’s schizophrenia treatment patent failed to meet one or more statutory patentability requirements — most commonly obviousness under 35 U.S.C. § 103, anticipation under § 102, or enablement/written description under § 112 in pharmaceutical patent challenges.
The Federal Circuit’s decision to vacate — rather than affirm or reverse outright — typically signals one of several analytical failures in the lower proceeding: an erroneous claim construction standard, insufficient factual findings to support the invalidity conclusion, an improper application of the burden of proof, or a failure to adequately address secondary considerations of non-obviousness (such as long-felt need, commercial success, or unexpected results).
In pharmaceutical patent litigation, secondary considerations carry significant evidentiary weight. CNS compounds targeting conditions like schizophrenia often survive obviousness challenges when patentees can demonstrate that the claimed compound produced unexpected therapeutic results or solved a previously unmet clinical need — arguments that lower tribunals sometimes inadequately weigh.
Freedom to Operate (FTO) Analysis for Pharma
Ce cas met en évidence les risques majeurs liés à la propriété intellectuelle dans le développement de médicaments destinés au système nerveux central. Choisissez la prochaine étape :
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Risque d'invalidité
Ongoing for US9815827B2
Case No.
22-2276, Vacated & Remanded
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✅ Points clés à retenir
A Federal Circuit vacatur-and-remand in a pharma invalidity case often signals inadequate factual findings or improper legal standards below — know the specific error to anticipate remand scope.
Rechercher la jurisprudence connexe →Pairing top-tier patent litigation counsel with specialized Federal Circuit appellate advocates is a demonstrated strategy in high-stakes pharmaceutical IP disputes.
Explore appellate counsel insights →Secondary considerations of non-obviousness remain critically important in pharmaceutical patent defense — build the record early.
Review secondary consideration precedents →Track the remand proceedings in Sumitomo v. Slayback — the lower court’s reconsideration will produce additional guidance on patentability standards for CNS drug compounds.
Monitor court dockets with PatSnap →Invalidity challenges do not guarantee generic entry timelines; appellate risk must be assessed in IP portfolio planning.
Assess IP portfolio risk →Foire aux questions
The case involved U.S. Patent No. US9815827B2 (Application No. US14/471919), covering an agent for the treatment of schizophrenia.
The Federal Circuit vacated and remanded the lower court’s ruling on the patent’s validity, returning the case for further proceedings without upholding the invalidity determination.
The decision reinforces that invalidity rulings must be supported by legally sound findings. It preserves Sumitomo’s patent rights pending remand and signals appellate courts’ rigorous review of patentability determinations in pharmaceutical cases.
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Références
- United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit — Case No. 22-2276
- USPTO Patent Center — US9815827B2
- Cornell Legal Information Institute — 35 U.S.C. § 103
- Cornell Legal Information Institute — 35 U.S.C. § 102
- Cornell Legal Information Institute — 35 U.S.C. § 112
- PACER — Case No. 22-2276
- PatSnap — Solutions de veille en matière de propriété intellectuelle pour les cabinets d'avocats
Cet article est publié à titre purement informatif et ne constitue en aucun cas un avis juridique. Toutes les informations relatives aux affaires sont tirées de dossiers judiciaires accessibles au public. Pour en savoir plus sur les fonctionnalités de la plateforme, rendez-vous sur PatSnap.