Court Rules In Pfizer's Favor In Norvasc Patent Case, Finds Synthon Obtained Patent By Inequitable Conduct
31 Januar 2007 - 10:02PM
PR Newswire (US)
NEW YORK, Jan. 31 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- The federal district
court in the Eastern District of Virginia (Alexandria) has ruled
that Synthon IP obtained, by inequitable conduct, two U.S. patents
alleged to cover a process and an intermediate compound used to
make the active ingredient in Pfizer's widely-prescribed
hypertension medication, Norvasc, Pfizer said today. Pfizer said
the court found that Synthon had knowingly failed to disclose to
the U.S. Patent Office Pfizer publications and other information it
had in its possession that described the process Synthon sought to
patent. "It's very difficult to meet the standards for establishing
inequitable conduct," said Allen Waxman, Pfizer's general counsel.
"But in this case it is clear that Synthon improperly used Pfizer's
own published material to obtain a patent that it then tried to
enforce against us." Pfizer said it intends to seek attorneys' fees
from Synthon. The case may be appealed. Synthon had asserted that
Pfizer's process for manufacturing Norvasc -- a process Pfizer had
not only published but has been using for 15 years -- infringed
Synthon patents issued in 2003 and 2005. In August of last year, a
jury unanimously ruled that one of those patents was not infringed
by Pfizer and was invalid on multiple grounds, principally because
it was based on Pfizer's prior published work. Synthon had dropped
its claim of infringement on the second patent prior to trial.
DATASOURCE: Pfizer Inc CONTACT: Bryant Haskins, +1-212-733-8719 Web
site: http://www.pfizer.com/ Company News On-Call: Pfizer's press
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http://www.prnewswire.com/comp/688250.html Company News On-Call:
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