Propiedad intelectual Formación en PI Respeto por la PI Divulgación de la PI La PI para... La PI y… La PI en… Información sobre patentes y tecnología Información sobre marcas Información sobre los diseños Información sobre las indicaciones geográficas Información sobre las variedades vegetales (UPOV) Leyes, tratados y sentencias de PI Recursos de PI Informes sobre PI Protección por patente Protección de las marcas Protección de los diseños Protección de las indicaciones geográficas Protección de las variedades vegetales (UPOV) Solución de controversias en materia de PI Soluciones operativas para las oficinas de PI Pagar por servicios de PI Negociación y toma de decisiones Cooperación para el desarrollo Apoyo a la innovación Colaboraciones público-privadas Herramientas y servicios de IA La Organización Trabajar en OMPI Rendición de cuentas Patentes Marcas Diseños Indicaciones geográficas Derecho de autor Secretos comerciales Futuro de la PI Academia de la OMPI Talleres y seminarios Observancia de la PI WIPO ALERT Sensibilizar Día Mundial de la PI Revista de la OMPI Casos prácticos y casos de éxito Novedades sobre la PI Premios de la OMPI Empresas Universidades Pueblos indígenas Judicatura Juventud Examinadores Ecosistemas de innovación Economía Financiación Activos intangibles Igualdad de género Salud mundial Cambio climático Política de competencia Objetivos de Desarrollo Sostenible Recursos genéticos, conocimientos tradicionales y expresiones culturales tradicionales Tecnologías de vanguardia Aplicaciones móviles Deportes Turismo Música Moda PATENTSCOPE Análisis de patentes Clasificación Internacional de Patentes ARDI - Investigación para la innovación ASPI - Información especializada sobre patentes Base Mundial de Datos sobre Marcas Madrid Monitor Base de datos Artículo 6ter Express Clasificación de Niza Clasificación de Viena Base Mundial de Datos sobre Dibujos y Modelos Boletín de Dibujos y Modelos Internacionales Base de datos Hague Express Clasificación de Locarno Base de datos Lisbon Express Base Mundial de Datos sobre Marcas para indicaciones geográficas Base de datos de variedades vegetales PLUTO Base de datos GENIE Tratados administrados por la OMPI WIPO Lex: leyes, tratados y sentencias de PI Normas técnicas de la OMPI Estadísticas de PI WIPO Pearl (terminología) Publicaciones de la OMPI Perfiles nacionales sobre PI Centro de Conocimiento de la OMPI Aspectos destacados de la inversión mundial en activos intangibles Informes de la OMPI sobre tendencias tecnológicas Índice Mundial de Innovación Informe mundial sobre la propiedad intelectual PCT - El sistema internacional de patentes ePCT Budapest - El Sistema internacional de depósito de microorganismos Madrid - El sistema internacional de marcas eMadrid Artículo 6ter (escudos de armas, banderas, emblemas de Estado) La Haya - Sistema internacional de diseños eHague Lisboa - Sistema internacional de indicaciones geográficas eLisbon UPOV PRISMA Mediación Arbitraje Determinación de expertos Disputas sobre nombres de dominio Acceso centralizado a la búsqueda y el examen (CASE) Servicio de acceso digital (DAS) WIPO Pay Cuenta corriente en la OMPI Asambleas de la OMPI Comités permanentes Calendario de reuniones WIPO Webcast Documentos oficiales de la OMPI Agenda para el Desarrollo Asistencia técnica Instituciones de formación en PI Fondo de Reconstrucción Estrategias nacionales de PI Asesoramiento sobre políticas y legislación Centro de cooperación Centros de apoyo a la tecnología y la innovación (CATI) Transferencia de tecnología Programa de Asistencia a los Inventores (PAI) WIPO GREEN PAT-INFORMED de la OMPI Consorcio de Libros Accesibles Consorcio de la OMPI para los Creadores WIPO Translate Conversión de voz a texto Asistente de clasificación Estados miembros Observadores Director general Actividades por unidad Oficinas en el exterior Puestos de plantilla Puestos de personal afiliado Adquisiciones Resultados y presupuesto Información financiera Supervisión
Arabic English Spanish French Russian Chinese
Leyes Tratados Sentencias Consultar por jurisdicción

Organización Europea de Patentes (OEP)

EPO108-j

Atrás

2025 WIPO IP Judges Forum Informal Case Summary - Boards of Appeal of the European Patent Office [2023]: Case No. T 1779/21 – Fenfluramine for Use in the Treatment of Dravet Syndrome

This is an informal case summary prepared for the purposes of facilitating exchange during the 2025 WIPO IP Judges Forum.

 

Session 2: Pharmaceutical Patents

 

Boards of Appeal of the European Patent Office [2023]: Case No. T 1779/21 - Fenfluramine for Use in the Treatment of Dravet Syndrome 

 

Date of judgment: December 19, 2023

Issuing authority: Boards of Appeal of the European Patent Office

Level of the issuing authority: Final Instance

Type of procedure: Judicial (Administrative)

Subject matter: Patents (inventions)

Appellant: Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd.

Respondents: Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, University Hospital Antwerp

Keywords: Pharmaceutical Patents, Sufficiency of Disclosure

 

Basic facts:  The case, T 1779/21, concerns the European patent No. 2991637, titled “Fenfluramine for use in the treatment of Dravet syndrome,” filed by Katholieke Universiteit Leuven and University Hospital Antwerp. The patent was opposed by Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. on grounds of lack of inventive step (Article 56 European Patent Convention (EPC)), insufficiency of disclosure (Article 100(b) EPC), and added subject matter (Article 100(c) EPC).

 

The patent claimed a formulation comprising fenfluramine or its pharmaceutically acceptable salt for oral administration as a monotherapy for treating Dravet syndrome. The opposition focused on the insufficiency of disclosure, arguing that the patent lacked experimental data or credible evidence to support the therapeutic effect of fenfluramine as a monotherapy for Dravet syndrome. The patent proprietors argued that the mechanism of action of fenfluramine made its therapeutic effect plausible, supported by prior art and post-published evidence.

 

Held:  The Board referred to point 74 of the Reasons of decision G 2/21 (OJ EPO 2023, A85), which confirmed in obiter the relevant case law, that “a technical effect, which in the case of for example a second medical use claim is usually a therapeutic effect, is a feature of the claim, so that the issue of whether it has been shown that this effect is achieved is a question of sufficiency of disclosure under Article 83 EPC” and that “it is necessary that the patent at the date of its filing renders it credible that the known therapeutic agent, i.e. the product, is suitable for the claimed therapeutic application”.

 

It therefore had to be decided whether fenfluramine as a monotherapy, i.e. as the sole therapeutic

agent, could be considered suitable for the treatment of Dravet syndrome at the relevant date. As

decision G 2/21 further explains, in point 77 of the Reasons:

 

“[i]n order to meet the requirement that the disclosure of the invention be sufficiently clear and complete for it to be carried out by the person skilled in the art, the proof of a claimed therapeutic effect has to be provided in the application as filed, in particular if, in the absence of experimental data in the application as filed, it would not be credible to the skilled person that the therapeutic effect is achieved. A lack in this respect cannot be remedied by post-published evidence.”

 

The present Board noted that the Enlarged Board endorsed the conclusions in T 609/02 (G 2/21, point 75 of the Reasons), and decisions T 754/11 and T 887/14. The expression “proof of a claimed therapeutic effect” in point 77 of the Reasons could therefore not be interpreted as a deviation from the established case law in the context of second medical uses: it did not apply a stricter requirement than the established case law prior to decision G 2/21. Rather, the Enlarged Board confirmed that means other than experimental data in the application as filed could establish proof of a claimed therapeutic effect.

 

What is required, however, in the absence of experimental evidence, is for the patent or the application as filed to provide some information demonstrating that the claimed compound had a direct effect on a metabolic mechanism specifically involved in the disease, this mechanism being either known from the prior art or demonstrated in the patent itself (see T 609/02, points 5 to 9 of the Reasons). With reference also to G 1/03, the Board thus concluded that a contribution to the state of the art which enabled the skilled person to carry out the invention had to be present in the application as filed.

 

In the absence of experimental data for fenfluramine monotherapy in the application as filed, the Board considered whether achieving the claimed therapeutic effect was made credible in the application as filed in another way. “Monotherapy” was explicitly mentioned in the application as filed as an alternative to combination therapy. However, this mere statement was not in itself sufficient to provide any “proof” in the sense of decision G 2/21.

 

Regarding the level of proof required, the Board noted that in view of the serious nature of the disease, additional circumstances have to be borne in mind when deciding whether “proof of the therapeutic effect” is provided in the application as filed. In this particular case, namely a very serious disease for which an established, albeit sub-optimal, therapy exists and where a wrong therapy decision could lead to irreversible damage, the level of proof required has to be at least such that the skilled person has reason to assume that the standard valproate treatment could be discontinued and replaced by fenfluramine without worsening the condition of the patient.

 

In the absence of experimental or clinical data in the application as filed that would indicate that a fenfluramine monotherapy had a therapeutic effect, the Board further considered whether the application as filed or the prior art established a direct effect by fenfluramine on a metabolic mechanism specifically involved in the disease. It concluded that, at the filing date, it was far from established whether the greater number of seizure-free patients with Dravet syndrome who were treated with fenfluramine as an add-on therapy resulted from increased serotonin levels, and importantly, the skilled person could not derive from the experimental data in the patent or the application as filed whether fenfluramine was able to exert its beneficial effect alone.

 

Since “proof of the therapeutic effect” is not provided in the application as filed, the Board also considered whether the teaching of the prior art provided the skilled person with any indication of a therapeutic effect of fenfluramine as a monotherapy for Dravet syndrome. In view of the established use of fenfluramine in combination with other anti-convulsive medicaments, and the very different nature and isolated cases of the two epileptic diseases for which monotherapy with fenfluramine was reported, the skilled person could not draw any conclusions as to the effectiveness of fenfluramine as a monotherapy for Dravet syndrome.

 

From the technical teaching of the application as filed, even taking into account the prior art, it was not credible that fenfluramine achieved a therapeutic effect in Dravet syndrome patients when given as a monotherapy. In line with decision G 2/21, the Board did not take the post-published data into account (see Reasons, point 77).

 

Relevant holdings in relation to Pharmaceutical Patents:

 

The Enlarged Board in G2/21 did not apply a stricter requirement than the established case law prior to this decision with regard to sufficiency of disclosure (Article 83 EPC) - means other than experimental data in the application as filed can establish proof of a claimed therapeutic effect.

 

In the absence of experimental evidence, the patent or the application as filed must provide some information demonstrating that the claimed compound had a direct effect on a metabolic mechanism specifically involved in the disease, either known from the prior art or demonstrated in the patent itself; a contribution to the state of the art which enables the skilled person to carry out the invention has to be present in the application as filed.

 

A mere statement is not in itself sufficient to provide any "proof" in the sense of decision G 2/21. However, regarding the level of proof required, additional circumstances may be borne in mind when deciding whether "proof of the therapeutic effect" is provided in the application as filed (in the case in hand, the serious nature of the disease).

 

It can be considered whether the application as filed or the prior art establishes the claimed therapeutic effect, or whether the teaching of the prior art provides the skilled person with any indication of a therapeutic effect.

 

Post-published evidence was not taken into consideration in the case in hand, in line with G2/21, point 77 of the Reasons.

                                                                                      

Relevant legislation: Articles 83,100(b), 100(c) EPC