In Re Sullivan

 United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit

                                      2006-1507
                               (Serial No. 08/405,454)




                 IN RE JOHN B. SULLIVAN and FINDLAY E. RUSSELL




      Lawrence M. Green, Wolf, Greenfield & Sacks, P.C., of Boston, Massachusetts,
argued for appellants. With him on the brief were Michael T. Siekman and Charles T.
Steenburg.

       Janet A. Gongola, Associate Solicitor, United States Patent and Trademark
Office, of Arlington, Virginia, argued for the Director of the United States Patent and
Trademark Office. With her on the brief was Stephen Walsh, Acting Solicitor.

Appealed from:      United States Patent and Trademark Office
                    Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences
     United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit




                                       2006-1507
                                (Serial No. 08/405,454)




                IN RE JOHN B. SULLIVAN and FINDLAY E. RUSSELL



                               ____________________

                             DECIDED: August 29, 2007
                              ____________________


Before NEWMAN, LOURIE, and GAJARSA, Circuit Judges.

LOURIE, Circuit Judge.

      Sullivan and Russell (collectively “applicant”) appeal from the decision of the

United States Patent and Trademark Office (“the PTO”) Board of Patent Appeals and

Interferences (“the Board”) affirming the examiner’s final rejection of claims 40-42 and

50 of application Serial No. 08/405,454 (“the ’454 application”) under 35 U.S.C. § 103

as having been obvious over two prior art references. In re Sullivan, No. 2006-0220

(B.P.A.I. Mar. 30, 2006). Because the Board failed to give any weight to the rebuttal

evidence of record, we vacate the Board’s decision and remand for further proceedings.

                                   BACKGROUND

      The subject matter of the appeal relates to an antivenom composition used to

treat venomous bites from a snake of the Crotalus genus, i.e., a rattlesnake.        An
antivenom is created by injecting a small amount of the targeted venom into an animal

such as a horse, sheep, goat, or rabbit. The animal will suffer an immune response to

the venom, producing antibodies against the venom’s active molecule.             Those

antibodies can then be harvested from the animal’s blood and used to treat humans

who have been injected with venom from a snake bite.

      A whole antibody molecule, commonly referred to as an immunoglobulin, can be

thought of as a Y-shaped protein comprised of three fragments. The v-shaped portion

of the Y-shaped protein is called a F(ab)2 fragment. When separated, each arm of the

v-shaped portion is called, in turn, a Fab fragment. F(ab)2 and Fab fragments recognize

and bind to specific antigens, such as the toxin in rattlesnake venom. The lower stem of

the Y-shaped antibody is called the Fc fragment and is not involved in antigen binding.

Diagrams of an antibody and its components are provided below for reference. The

diagram on the left shows a whole antibody and indicates the Fc region and the Fab

region. The Fab region can be considered a F(ab)2 fragment. The diagram on the right

shows two Fab fragments that are separated from the Fc region.




      An intact antibody, F(ab)2, and Fab fragments have separate properties and

utilities. Since 1969, most commercially available antivenom products have consisted

of a class of whole antibodies, known as immunoglobulin G (“IgG”), but there have also



2006-1507                                  2
been antivenom products that comprised only F(ab)2 fragments. Although antivenom

products consisting of either IgG or F(ab)2 fragments are effective at binding to venom

toxins, they often invoke adverse immune reactions in humans. Researchers did not

experiment with antivenoms containing only Fab fragments because it was believed that

their unique properties would prevent them from decreasing the toxicity of snake

venom. Sullivan discovered, however, that Fab fragments are effective at neutralizing

the lethality of rattlesnake venom, while reducing the occurrence of adverse immune

reactions in humans.

       Applicant filed the ’454 application with claims directed to an antivenom

composition comprising Fab fragments that bind specifically to venom from snakes of

the Crotalus genus and a pharmaceutical carrier. 1          Representative claim 40, as

originally filed, reads as follows:

       An antivenom composition comprising Fab fragments which bind
       specifically to a venom of a snake of the Crotalus genus and which are
       essentially free from contaminating Fc as determined by
       immunoelectrophoresis using anti-Fc antibodies, and a pharmaceutically
       acceptable carrier.

       The examiner rejected the claim under 35 U.S.C. § 103 as being obvious over

Sullivan 2 in view of Coulter 3 and two additional references. In the first appeal to the



       1
             In the patent application as initially filed, there were also claims directed to
a process for isolating the Fab fragments. The examiner required a restriction of the
claims, and the inventors initially pursued the set of process claims. Those claims
ultimately matured into U.S. Patent 4,849,352.
       2
             J.B. Sullivan, Jr. & F.E. Russell, Isolation and Purification of Antibodies to
Rattlesnake Venom by Affinity Chromatography, 25 Proc. W. Pharmacology Soc. 185,
185-92 (1982).
       3
            Alan Coulter & Rodney Harris, Simplified Preparation of Rabbit Fab
Fragments, 59 J. Immunological Methods 199, 199-203 (1983).


2006-1507                                    3
Board, the Board affirmed the rejection of claim 40 as being obvious, but only relied

upon Sullivan and Coulter for its rejection. In re Sullivan, No. 2001-1255 (B.P.A.I. Jan.

29, 2003). The Board found that Sullivan teaches whole antibodies purified from horse

serum for use against venom from rattlesnakes, but fails to teach the use of Fab

fragments. The Board also found that Coulter discloses a method for producing Fab

fragments in place of whole antibodies. The Board noted that Coulter further teaches

using Fab fragments in enzyme immunoassays (“EIAs”) 4 to detect textilotoxin, a kind of

snake toxin from the venom of the Australian brown snake. Also, Coulter teaches that

Fab fragments used in EIAs yielded results similar to those obtained with whole IgG.

      Based upon those teachings, the Board agreed with the examiner that all the

limitations of claim 40 were disclosed in Sullivan and Coulter. The Board concluded

that a person of ordinary skill in the art would have been motivated to produce Fab

fragments for use in EIAs to detect the venom from rattlesnakes because Coulter

teaches that Fab fragments are able to detect textilotoxins. The Board further stated

that the term “antivenom” in the preamble could not render claim 40 patentable over

Sullivan and Coulter, reasoning that “the mere statement of new use, in this case ‘an

antivenom’ for an otherwise old or obvious composition, cannot render a claim to the

composition patentable.” Sullivan, No. 2001-1255, slip op. at 9. The Board also held

that, although it was not previously addressed, Coulter discloses collecting Fab

fragments in a phosphate buffered saline (“PBS”), which is a pharmaceutically



      4
              An EIA is a biochemical test that measures the level of a substance in a
biological sample, such as serum or urine, using the reaction of an antibody to its
antigen. Based on the amount of antibody detected, the amount of substance bound to
the antibody can be determined.



2006-1507                                  4
acceptable carrier. The Board concluded that the asserted claims were prima facie

obvious over the combination of Sullivan in view of Coulter.

       The Board stated that since its decision contained a new ground of rejection, the

applicant could either move for reconsideration by the Board or return to prosecution

before the examiner. 5 Applicant chose to return to prosecution before the examiner.

Applicant then amended claim 40 to its current form, adding language to the preamble

and to the end of the claim. Amended claim 40 reads as follows, with the underlined

portions identifying the portions of the claim that were added:

       An antivenom pharmaceutical composition for treating a snakebite victim,
       comprising Fab fragments which bind specifically to a venom of a snake of
       the Crotalus genus and which are essentially free from contaminating Fc
       as determined by immunoelectrophoresis using anti-Fc antibodies, and a
       pharmaceutically    acceptable   carrier,   wherein     said   antivenom
       pharmaceutical composition neutralizes the lethality of the venom of a
       snake of the Crotalus genus.

       The examiner rejected amended claims 40-42 and 50 6 under 35 U.S.C. § 103 as

obvious over the combination of Sullivan and Coulter. The examiner found that the

additional language in claim 40 did not render the claim patentable. The examiner

reasoned that the originally claimed composition contained the same components as

the amended claimed composition. The examiner issued a final rejection, and applicant

appealed to the Board. In the second appeal to the Board, the Board noted that there



       5
               Under 37 C.F.R. § 41.50(b)(1), when the Board issues a new ground of
rejection, an applicant may “[s]ubmit an appropriate amendment of the claims so
rejected . . . and have the matter reconsidered by the examiner, in which event the
proceeding will be remanded to the examiner. . . . Should the examiner reject the
claims, appellant may again appeal to the Board pursuant to this subpart.”
       6
               According to Sullivan, the claims stand or fall together. Thus, the Board
limited its discussion to representative independent claim 40. Similarly, we only discuss
claim 40.


2006-1507                                   5
were only two differences between original claim 40 and amended claim 40: (1) the

recitation of intended use that states that the pharmaceutical composition is for treating

a snakebite victim, and (2) the functional limitation that requires the pharmaceutical

composition to neutralize the lethality of the venom of a rattlesnake.          The Board

addressed each amendment in turn.

      With regard to the first amended portion, the Board again stated that a statement

of a new use for an otherwise old or obvious composition cannot render a claim to the

composition   patentable.   The   Board    noted   that   the   phrase,   “an   antivenom

pharmaceutical composition for treating a snakebite victim,” simply states the intended

use for the invention. Sullivan, No. 2006-0220, slip op. at 11. The Board also noted

that “all the elements of appellants’ claimed composition are accounted for in the prior

art relied upon on this record.” Id. at 13. Thus, the Board held that the amended

preamble did not render the claim patentable.

      Most relevant to the resolution of the appeal, the Board then stated in a footnote:

“The remainder of appellants [sic] arguments on this record, in addition to the

Declarations of record, relate to the use of the claimed composition as an antivenom.

Since we have placed not [sic] weight on the intended use of appellants’ composition

we do not address these arguments or the Declarations.” Id. at 13 n.7.

      The Board then considered the second amended portion of the claim, which

includes the limitation of neutralizing the lethality of the rattlesnake venom. The Board

found that Coulter teaches that neutralization tests performed in mice showed that

whole antibodies and Fab fragments were equivalent in their neutralizing ability.

Accordingly, the Board found that the additional requirement that the composition of




2006-1507                                   6
claim 40 neutralize the lethality of the venom of a rattlesnake did not render the claim

patentable. The Board thus held that the composition taught by the combination of

Sullivan and Coulter would have been expected by a person of ordinary skill in the art at

the time the invention was made to neutralize the lethality of the venom of a rattlesnake.

      Applicant timely appealed, and we have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C.

§ 1295(a)(4)(A).

                                     DISCUSSION

      The determination whether an invention would have been obvious under 35

U.S.C. § 103 is a legal conclusion based on underlying findings of fact. In re Kotzab,

217 F.3d 1365, 1369 (Fed. Cir. 2000).       We review the Board’s legal conclusion of

obviousness de novo and its underlying factual determinations for substantial evidence.

In re Gartside, 203 F.3d 1305, 1316 (Fed. Cir. 2000). “Substantial evidence requires

the reviewing court to ask whether a reasonable person might find that the evidentiary

record supports the agency’s conclusion.” On-Line Careline, Inc. v. Am. Online, Inc.,

229 F.3d 1080, 1085 (Fed. Cir. 2000).

      On appeal, applicant argues that the Board failed to establish that the claimed

composition was prima facie obvious over Sullivan in view of Coulter.           Applicant

specifically argues that a person having ordinary skill in the art would not have been

motivated to combine Sullivan and Coulter to achieve the result of “neutralizing the

lethality of the rattlesnake venom.” Applicant argues that Coulter teaches using Fab

fragments to detect, rather than treat, venom. Applicant further argues that, even if the

Board had shown that the invention was prima facie obvious, the Board erred by

ignoring extensive rebuttal evidence. According to applicant, the Board failed to




2006-1507                                   7
consider three expert declarations on the ground that they only describe the intended

use of the composition. Applicant contends that the declarations describe how the prior

art taught away from using Fab fragments to neutralize rattlesnake venom, how a

person having ordinary skill in the art would not have known how to use Fab fragments

to neutralize rattlesnake venom, and how Fab fragment antivenom exhibits an

unexpected property. Moreover, applicant contends that the rebuttal evidence relates to

objective indicia of nonobviousness, and that the Board erred as a matter of law by

failing to consider that evidence.

       The Director of the PTO responds that the Board correctly determined that the

claimed composition was prima facie obvious over Sullivan in view of Coulter. The

Director asserts that all the limitations of claim 40 are taught by Sullivan and Coulter

and that the motivation to combine those references is found in the references

themselves and the knowledge of those skilled in the art. According to the Director, the

amendments to claim 40 merely relate to the use of the claimed product and do not

render the claim patentable because a new use of an obvious composition is not

patentable. The Director also submits that the Board did consider the declarations and

correctly gave them no weight because they only relate to the use of the claimed

composition.    The Director also contends that applicant’s argument as to secondary

considerations such as unexpected results and commercial success is being raised for

the first time on appeal and should be deemed waived.

       We agree with applicant that the Board improperly failed to consider the rebuttal

evidence and we therefore vacate the Board’s decision and remand for the Board to

consider the declarations. It is well settled that the PTO “bears the initial burden of




2006-1507                                  8
presenting a prima facie case of unpatentability. . . . However, when a prima facie case

is made, the burden shifts to the applicant to come forward with evidence and/or

argument supporting patentability.” In re Glaug, 283 F.3d 1335, 1338 (Fed. Cir. 2002).

Rebuttal evidence is “merely a showing of facts supporting the opposite conclusion.” In

re Piasecki, 745 F.2d 1468, 1472 (Fed. Cir. 1984). Evidence rebutting a prima face

case of obviousness can include: “evidence of unexpected results,” Pfizer, Inc. v.

Apotex, Inc., 480 F.3d 1348, 1369 (Fed. Cir. 2007), evidence “that the prior art teaches

away from the claimed invention in any material respect,” In re Peterson, 315 F.3d

1325, 1331 (Fed. Cir. 2003), and evidence of secondary considerations, such as

commercial success and long-felt but unresolved needs, WMS Gaming, Inc. v. Int’l

Game Tech., 184 F.3d 1339, 1359 (Fed. Cir. 1999). When a patent applicant puts forth

rebuttal evidence, the Board must consider that evidence. See In re Soni, 54 F.3d 746,

750 (Fed. Cir. 1995) (stating that “all evidence of nonobviousness must be considered

when assessing patentability”); In re Sernaker, 702 F.2d 989, 996 (Fed. Cir. 1983) (“If,

however, a patent applicant presents evidence relating to these secondary

considerations, the board must always consider such evidence in connection with the

determination of obviousness.”).

      For purposes of this appeal, we assume that the Board established a prima facie

case of unpatentability under § 103. There was no showing of unpatentability under

§ 102, as the subject matter of claim 40 was not described in either Sullivan or Coulter.

We accept, however, that a prima facie case of obviousness was established because

Sullivan teaches whole antibodies for use against rattlesnake venom and Coulter

teaches using Fab fragments to detect venom of a different snake.            It was not




2006-1507                                  9
unreasonable for one skilled in the art of snake venom to consider that a Fab fragment

of a whole antibody that neutralizes one type of venom might be used to neutralize the

venom of another species. See KSR Int’l Co. v. Teleflex Inc., 550 U.S. __, 2007 WL

1237837, at *13 (2007) (stating that “if a technique has been used to improve one

device, and a person of ordinary skill in the art would recognize that it would improve

similar devices in the same way, using the technique is obvious unless its actual

application is beyond his or her skill”).

       Accepting that there was a prima facie obviousness case, however, there was

rebuttal evidence. While the Director argues that that evidence only relates to use of an

obvious composition, that is incorrect.     Whether the composition would have been

obvious cannot be determined without considering evidence attempting to rebut the

prima facie case.

       We therefore turn our attention to the Board’s consideration, or lack thereof, of

the rebuttal evidence submitted by applicant. Upon our review of the record, we find

that there were three pieces of evidence in the record that the applicant submitted to the

PTO to rebut a prima facie finding of obviousness. First, in response to the examiner’s

first Office Action that rejected the originally filed claims, applicant relied upon and

submitted a declaration by Dr. Damon Smith, an expert involved in developing

antivenoms for different snake species. That declaration discusses the state of the prior

art for antivenoms and discusses why, since 1969, the only commercially available

antivenom products included either intact IgG or F(ab)2 fragments. The declaration

further discusses why those skilled in the art would not have expected Fab fragments to




2006-1507                                   10
effectively neutralize venom. That declaration therefore is relevant as evidence that the

prior art taught away from the claimed invention.

      The second piece of rebuttal evidence submitted to the PTO is a declaration by

one of the inventors, Dr. John B. Sullivan.         After the claims were finally rejected,

applicant filed a continuation application in March 1995 and filed the second declaration

by Dr. Sullivan. That declaration also discusses why those having ordinary skill in the

art would not have expected Fab fragments to be useful as antivenoms.                  The

declaration extensively explains the unique properties of whole antibodies and F(ab)2

fragments, including that the body does not clear them as quickly as it clears Fab

fragments. Because venom remains in the body for an extended period of time and the

body quickly clears Fab fragments, the declaration discusses why experts did not

experiment with Fab fragments as an antivenom. Also, the declaration states that the

success of equine-derived antivenom containing IgG results from its possessing an

extra disulfide bond that allows IgG to bind to repeating protein antigens.         A Fab

fragment does not have such a bond, and the experts believed that Fab fragment

antivenom would therefore not negate the toxic effects of venom.           The declaration

further explains that the inventors conducted experiments and clinical trials using Fab

fragment antivenom and discovered, contrary to what the experts had believed, that it

effectively neutralizes the toxicity of rattlesnake venom, while also decreasing the

occurrence of adverse immune reactions in humans. This inventor’s declaration thus

describes an unexpected property or result from the use of Fab fragment antivenom.

      The third piece of rebuttal evidence submitted by the applicant is a declaration by

Dr. Russell, one of the inventors. The first version of this declaration appears to have




2006-1507                                  11
been submitted after the first Office Action of the continuation application.         The

examiner considered it but found it unpersuasive to overcome a prima facie case of

unpatentability. That declaration further discusses why those having ordinary skill in the

art expected antivenoms comprising Fab fragments to fail.

       The Board failed to consider each of these declarations. The Board stated in a

footnote that the declarations of record relate only to the use of the claimed composition

as an antivenom, and thus the Board expressly declined to give any meaningful

consideration to them. Sullivan, No. 2006-0220, slip op. at 13 n.7. As stated above,

when an applicant puts forth relevant rebuttal evidence, as it did here, the Board must

consider such evidence. The claimed composition cannot be held to have been obvious

if competent evidence rebuts the prima facie case of obviousness.           By failing to

consider the submitted evidence, the Board thus committed error.          That is not to

suggest that the Board’s finding of obviousness must be overturned in light of the

evidence; rather, the Board must give the declarations meaningful consideration before

arriving at its conclusion.

       Moreover, the Board was mistaken to assert that the declarations only relate to

the use of the claimed composition. The declarations do more than that; they purport to

show an unexpected result from use of the claimed composition, how the prior art

taught away from the composition, and how a long-felt need existed for a new

antivenom composition. While a statement of intended use may not render a known

composition patentable, the claimed composition was not known, and whether it would

have been obvious depends upon consideration of the rebuttal evidence. Had the Board




2006-1507                                  12
considered or reviewed the declarations in any meaningful way, it might have arrived at

a different conclusion than it did.

       Furthermore, the Board’s focus on the intended use of the claimed composition

misses the mark. The Board cites In re Zierden, 411 F.2d 1325 (CCPA 1969), for the

proposition that a statement of a new use for an otherwise old or obvious composition

cannot render a claim to the composition patentable. In that case, applicant conceded

that his composition was distinguished from the composition disclosed in a prior art

patent only by the statement of intended use. Our predecessor court held that that

intended use for the known composition could not render the claim patentable. In this

case, applicant does not concede that the only distinguishing factor of its composition is

the statement of intended use and, in fact, extensively argues that its claimed

composition exhibits the unexpected property of neutralizing the lethality of rattlesnake

venom while reducing the occurrence of adverse immune reactions in humans. Such a

use and unexpected property cannot be ignored. See In re Papesch, 315 F.2d 381, 391

(CCPA 1963) (“From the standpoint of patent law, a compound and all of its properties

are inseparable; they are one and the same thing. . . . There is no basis in law for

ignoring any property in making such a comparison.”). The issue here is not whether a

claim recites a new use, but whether the subject matter of the claim possesses an

unexpected use.      That unexpected property is relevant, and thus the declarations

describing it should have been considered by the Board.

       Finally, we reject the Director’s argument that the applicant for the first time on

appeal argues secondary considerations, such as unexpected results, and therefore

that the argument should be considered waived. As discussed above, the applicant




2006-1507                                  13
submitted the declarations to the examiner during prosecution, and the declarations

extensively describe the unexpected property of Fab fragments neutralizing the lethality

of rattlesnake venom and how this was not known in the prior art.      Thus, we do not

consider that argument to have been waived.

                                    CONCLUSION

      For the foregoing reasons, we vacate the Board’s decision and remand for the

Board to consider the declarations of record.

                              VACATED and REMANDED




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