Regeneron v. Mylan: Voluntary Dismissal in VEGF Eye Disorder Patent Appeal

🔍 Run FTO analysis 🔎 Search patents

📋 Résumé de l'affaire

Nom de l'affaireRegeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc. v. Mylan NV, Celltrion, Inc., and Samsung Bioepis Co., Ltd.
Numéro de dossier24-1567 (Fed. Cir.)
TribunalCircuit fédéral, appel du circuit du district de Columbia
DuréeMar 2024 – Aug 2024 160 days
RésultatRejet volontaire
Brevet en cause
Produits incriminésVEGF Antagonist Biosimilars (Aflibercept Biosimilars)

Aperçu du dossier

Introduction

In a strategically significant development for biopharmaceutical patent litigation, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc. voluntarily dismissed its appeal against Mylan NV, Celltrion, Inc., and Samsung Bioepis Co., Ltd. before the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit — just 160 days after filing. The case, docketed as Case No. 24-1567, centered on U.S. Patent No. US10888601B2, covering the use of a VEGF antagonist to treat angiogenic eye disorders — a high-value therapeutic category encompassing conditions such as wet age-related macular degeneration (AMD) and diabetic macular edema.

The voluntary dismissal, entered August 20, 2024, raises immediate questions about Regeneron’s patent enforcement posture in the rapidly evolving VEGF antagonist biosimilar landscape. For patent attorneys, IP professionals, and R&D leaders monitoring ophthalmic biologics patent litigation, this case offers critical insights into appellate strategy, biosimilar competition dynamics, and the litigation calculus that governs high-stakes pharmaceutical patent disputes.

Les parties

⚖️ Demandeur

Leading biotechnology company best known for EYLEA® (aflibercept), a VEGF antagonist therapy generating multi-billion-dollar annual revenues in the treatment of angiogenic eye disorders. Protecting its EYLEA franchise through robust patent portfolios has been a cornerstone of Regeneron’s IP strategy.

🛡️ Défendeur

Global generic and biosimilar pharmaceutical companies with established track records of challenging branded pharmaceutical patents. Includes Mylan NV (now Viatris), Celltrion, Inc., and Samsung Bioepis Co., Ltd., all with active biosimilar development pipelines.

Le brevet en cause

This case involved a critical patent covering the use of VEGF antagonists, a high-value therapeutic category. The patent is registered with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) and is key to the biopharmaceutical space.

  • US10888601B2 (Application No. US16/397267) — Use of a VEGF (Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor) antagonist to treat angiogenic eye disorders

Chronologie du litige et historique de la procédure

étape importanteDate
Appel interjetéMarch 13, 2024
Ordonnance de désistement volontaireAugust 20, 2024
Durée totale160 jours

Filed: March 13, 2024, in the District of Columbia circuit before the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit — the exclusive appellate forum for U.S. patent matters.

The appeal’s 160-day lifespan is notably brief for Federal Circuit patent litigation, which typically spans 18–36 months through full briefing, oral argument, and decision. The case never progressed to substantive merits briefing; the dismissal was unopposed, indicating no contested procedural dispute at the appellate stage.

The Federal Circuit filing suggests this appeal arose from a prior district court or PTAB proceeding, though specific lower-court case data was not disclosed in the available record. The involvement of Celltrion and Samsung Bioepis as co-defendants alongside Mylan suggests coordinated biosimilar challenger litigation — a common pattern in BPCIA disputes where multiple biosimilar applicants file contemporaneously.

🔍

Developing a VEGF antagonist biosimilar?

Check if your product might infringe this or related patents before launch.

Lancer la vérification FTO →

Le verdict et l'analyse juridique

Résultat

On August 20, 2024, the Federal Circuit granted Regeneron’s unopposed motion to voluntarily dismiss the appeals pursuant to Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 42. The court’s order specified that each party shall bear its own costs, a standard provision in voluntary dismissals that avoids fee-shifting and preserves commercial relationships — a detail worth noting in the context of ongoing biosimilar negotiations.

No damages were awarded. No injunctive relief was granted or denied. The dismissal was procedural rather than substantive — the Federal Circuit issued no ruling on patent validity, infringement findings, or claim construction.

Analyse des causes du verdict

The basis of termination is recorded as voluntary dismissal under an infringement action. Regeneron’s decision to file an unopposed motion — rather than a contested withdrawal — indicates the defendants raised no procedural objection, suggesting possible mutual agreement or a negotiated resolution outside the court record.

Several strategic interpretations merit consideration:

  • Settlement or Licensing Agreement: Voluntary dismissals with each party bearing its own costs frequently signal confidential settlement negotiations, including licensing arrangements or agreed market-entry timelines for biosimilars.
  • Mooting Event: Changes in patent status, product approval timelines, or concurrent PTAB proceedings can render an appeal moot, prompting voluntary withdrawal.
  • Strategic Reassessment: Regeneron may have concluded that the appellate record was unfavorable or that alternative IP enforcement pathways — including additional patent families — offered stronger protection for its VEGF franchise.

Because specific lower-court findings were not included in the available case data, the precise triggering event for dismissal cannot be confirmed. The absence of a substantive Federal Circuit ruling means no binding precedent was established in this appeal.

Signification juridique

The lack of a merits ruling limits direct precedential impact. However, the case underscores a broader litigation trend: branded pharmaceutical companies increasingly deploy appeal proceedings as negotiation leverage rather than as vehicles for definitive judicial resolution. In the BPCIA (Biologics Price Competition and Innovation Act) biosimilar litigation framework, the 12-year exclusivity window and patent dance procedures create complex multi-party dynamics where appellate filings may serve strategic commercial functions independent of their ultimate judicial outcome.

Points stratégiques à retenir

Pour les titulaires de brevets :

VEGF antagonist patent portfolios require layered protection across composition, method-of-use, and dosing claims to sustain enforcement against multiple biosimilar challengers simultaneously.

Voluntary dismissal preserves flexibility — patent holders retain the right to assert the same patent in future infringement actions absent a final judgment on the merits.

Pour les auteurs présumés d'infractions :

An unopposed voluntary dismissal without prejudice may leave litigation exposure unresolved; biosimilar applicants should assess whether res judicata or collateral estoppel bars future re-assertion.

Cost-bearing provisions (each party bears own costs) confirm this was a negotiated exit, not a concession of merit.

Pour les équipes de R&D :

Freedom-to-operate (FTO) analyses for VEGF antagonist products must account for remaining Regeneron patent family members beyond US10888601B2, as dismissal of one appeal does not eliminate the broader patent estate.

⚠️

Analyse de la liberté d'exploitation (FTO)

This case highlights critical IP risks in biopharmaceutical development. Choose your next step:

📋 Understand Biopharma IP Landscape

Learn about the specific risks and implications from this litigation in the VEGF space.

  • Consulter les brevets associés dans ce domaine thérapeutique
  • See which companies are most active in biopharma IP
  • Comprendre les schémas d'interprétation des revendications pour les produits biologiques
📊 Voir le paysage des brevets
⚠️
Zone à haut risque

VEGF Antagonist Therapies

📋
Regeneron’s Portfolio

Monitor broader patent family

Biosimilar Design-Arounds

Feasible with strategic IP planning

✅ Points clés à retenir

Pour les avocats spécialisés en brevets et les avocats plaidants

Voluntary dismissal under FRAP Rule 42 preserves future enforcement rights absent a consent judgment — confirm dismissal terms carefully.

Rechercher la jurisprudence connexe →

No Federal Circuit merits ruling means no binding precedent on VEGF antagonist claim construction from this proceeding.

Explorer les précédents →

Multi-defendant biosimilar appeals require coordinated case management across BPCIA patent dance obligations.

Analyze BPCIA cases →
🔒
Unlock IP Professional Recommendations
Gain insights into monitoring broader patent portfolios, tracking licensing developments, and assessing biosimilar market entry strategies.
Portfolio Monitoring Licensing Strategy Biosimilar Market Entry
Découvrez l'analyse complète dans PatSnap Eureka
Pour les responsables R&D

FTO clearance for VEGF antagonist products requires comprehensive patent family analysis, not reliance on single-case dismissal.

Lancer l'analyse FTO pour mon produit →

Biosimilar development timelines remain subject to multi-layered patent risk despite this appeal’s closure.

Assess biosimilar risk factors →

Foire aux questions

Prêt à renforcer votre stratégie en matière de brevets ?

Rejoignez plus de 18 000 professionnels de la propriété intellectuelle qui utilisent PatSnap Eureka pour effectuer des recherches d'antériorité, rédiger des brevets et analyser le paysage concurrentiel avec une précision optimisée par l'IA.

Équipe PatSnap IP Intelligence

Recherche en matière de brevets et veille concurrentielle · PatSnap

Cette analyse a été réalisée par l'équipe PatSnap IP Intelligence, composée d'analystes en brevets, de stratèges en propriété intellectuelle et de scientifiques des données qui travaillent quotidiennement avec la base de données mondiale de PatSnap, qui regroupe plus de 2 milliards de données structurées issues de brevets, de dossiers de litiges, de publications scientifiques et de documents réglementaires.

L'équipe est spécialisée dans le suivi des décisions judiciaires marquantes, la traduction de jugements complexes en stratégies concrètes en matière de propriété intellectuelle, ainsi que l'identification des implications en matière de veille concurrentielle pour les équipes de R&D et les services juridiques. Toutes les analyses de cas s'appuient sur des sources primaires : dossiers judiciaires officiels, dépôts auprès de l'USPTO et arrêts de la Cour d'appel fédérale.

📊 Plus de 2 milliards de données sur les brevets 🌍 Plus de 120 pays couverts 🏢 Plus de 18 000 clients dans le monde ⚖️ Base de données mondiale sur les litiges 🔍 Sources primaires vérifiées

Références

  1. Cour d'appel des États-Unis pour le circuit fédéral
  2. Centre des brevets de l'USPTO
  3. PACER (Accès public aux dossiers électroniques des tribunaux)
  4. Cornell Legal Information Institute — Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 42
  5. FDA — Biosimilar and Interchangeable Products
  6. PatSnap — IP Intelligence Solutions for Biotechnology & Pharma

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.

⚖️ Avertissement : cet article est fourni à titre informatif uniquement et ne constitue pas un avis juridique. L'analyse présentée reflète les informations publiques disponibles sur les affaires et les principes juridiques généraux. Pour obtenir des conseils spécifiques concernant les litiges en matière de brevets, l'analyse FTO ou la stratégie en matière de propriété intellectuelle, veuillez consulter un avocat spécialisé en brevets.