Home » UPC decisions » Luxembourg Court of Appeal » CoA, November 25, 2025, Decision on claim interpretation medical use claim, added matter, sufficiency, inventive step, reasonable expectation of success, UPC_CoA_528/2024, UPC_CoA_529/2024

CoA, November 25, 2025, Decision on claim interpretation medical use claim, added matter, sufficiency, inventive step, reasonable expectation of success, UPC_CoA_528/2024, UPC_CoA_529/2024

5 min Reading time

Key takeaways

The Court found that uncertainty about the relative contribution of a protein’s intracellular versus extracellular pathways in vivo was a critical factor preventing a reasonable expectation of success.

Prior art showing only marginal effects at physiological concentrations undermined any rational prediction that an antibody therapy, which only acts extracellularly, would be therapeutically effective.

Contemporaneous research by competitors indicated the field was interesting to explore but did not establish that success was predictable, thus not negating inventive step.

This requirement stems directly from the ‘medical use’ claim format itself and is not dependent on specific wording in the claim or the patent’s description.

The Court of First Instance had wrongly used dependent claims on combination therapy to lower the efficacy standard required for the monotherapy protected by the main claim.

The Court rejected the patent challenger’s “arbitrary mosaic” argument, finding that the application contained clear pointers and links making the claimed combination the preferred, non-arbitrary embodiment.

The patent challenger bears the burden of proof and failed to provide evidence of failed attempts. The Court noted that laborious methods are not automatically an “undue burden.”

The Court ordered each of the two unsuccessful parties to pay the successful party EUR 1.375 million for first instance costs and set the value per appeal at EUR 100 million.

Division

Court of Appeal

UPC number

UPC_CoA_528/2024, UPC_CoA_529/2024

Type of proceedings

Appeal against a decision in a revocation action and a counterclaim for revocation

Parties

Appellant / Defendant (First Instance): Amgen, Inc.
Respondents / Claimants & Counter-Claimant (First Instance): Sanofi-Aventis Deutschland GmbH, Sanofi-Aventis Groupe S.A., Sanofi Winthrop Industrie S.A. (“Sanofi”); Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc. (“Regeneron”)

Patent(s)

EP 3 666 797

Jurisdictions

UPC

Body of legislation / Rules

Art. 56 European Patent Convention (EPC)
Art. 138(1)(b) EPC
Art. 138(1)(c) EPC
Art. 69 Agreement on a Unified Patent Court (UPCA)
Rule 118.8 Rules of Procedure of the UPC (RoP)


Was the article helpful?


Categories


Tags

  • German and European Patent Attorney, UPC Representative, Senior Associate

Stay in the loop

Never miss a beat by subscribing to the email newsletter. Please see our Privacy Policy.

* = Required field